[1] My topic for the conference is the practices of faith and
the practice of law, and I begin by offering a story that presents
these two sets of practices in sharp relief. I will then make some
general remarks on the subject of practices in general, what
practices are and do, and then conclude with some remarks about the
specific practices of law and faith, where they overlap, where they
conflict.
[2] And I do all of this, I must say at the outset, with some
trepidation, knowing rather more about the practices of faith than
the practice of law. However, I married into a family of lawyers
and Jesuits, experts in constitutional and canon law, and can only
hope to have acquired some familiarity with the practice of law by
osmosis.
I. A conversation with a lawyer
[3] But to the story. It is a story with which we are all
familiar, but probably never examined from the perspective of the
respective practices of law and faith. I submit the story as a
study in the practices of law and faith.
[4] You'll find it is one of the few conversations Jesus has
with a lawyer. The conversation presents two formidable
rhetoricians at their lawyerly best; it's in scripture because it
tells all of us - whatever our profession or calling - something
crucial about the practice of faith. We won't understand the
gravity of that insight unless we appreciate that only a
conversation with a lawyer would have provoked it. You will
recognize the story as the parable of the Good Samaritan, and I
invite you to listen with fresh ears.
Just then a lawyer stood up to test Jesus. "Teacher," he said,
"what must I do to inherit eternal life?" He said to him, "What is
written in the law? What do you read there?" He answered, "You
shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your
soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your
neighbor as yourself." And he said to him, "You have given the
right answer; do this, and you will live." But wanting to justify
himself, he asked Jesus, "And who is my neighbor?" Jesus replied,
"A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell into the
hands of robbers, who stripped him, beat him, and went away,
leaving him half dead. Now by chance a priest was going down that
road; and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side. So
likewise a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by
on the other side. But a Samaritan while traveling came near him;
and when he saw him, he was moved with pity. He went to him and
bandaged his wounds, having poured oil and wine on them. Then he
put him on his own animal, brought him to an inn, and took care of
him. The next day he took out two denarii, gave them to the
innkeeper, and said, "Take care of him; and when I come back, I
will repay you whatever more you spend.' Which of these three, do
you think, was a neighbor to the man who fell into the hands of the
robbers?" He said, "The one who showed him mercy." Jesus said to
him, "Go and do likewise." Luke 10: 25-37
[5] The lawyer is probably a lot like yourselves: practitioner
in two crafts: discipleship and law. Probably this lawyer is an
expert in Jewish law, because he begins his interrogation of Jesus
with a distinctly religious question: "What must I do to inherit
eternal life?" And Jesus, deploying a familiar courtroom tactic,
deftly turns the question back on him: "Well, you're a lawyer: what
does it say in the law?" And the lawyer recites the whole of the
Torah standing on one foot: "Love the Lord your God with all your
heart and soul and strength and mind, and love you neighbor as
yourself." Jesus commends him: "Do this and you shall live."
[6] First exchange: examination, cross. We are ready for a
second exchange. The lawyer does not fail us: "But who is my
neighbor?" The lawyer does not get a direct answer this time
either. Instead of answering a question with a question, as he did
in the first exchange, Jesus now responds with a story - in legal
terms, we could call it a case. But two things are interesting
about Jesus' choice of response.
[7] 1. First, he responds with a parable. This parable is not an
allegory, like the parable of the sower (Mark 4:3-9; Matt. 13:3-9;
Luke 8:5-8) Some of the seed falls on the path and is snapped up
immediately by birds; some falls on rocky ground, springs up
quickly, then dies; some falls into thorns and gets choked; some
falls on good soil and brings forth grain a hundredfold. The story
has been passed on as the parable of the sower, but it's neither
about a sower, nor is it strictly speaking a parable. I've always
thought the word "sower" ought to be somehow qualified. What we
have in this story is either a myopic sower or a prodigal sower:
someone who either badly needs glasses or has seed to spare.
[8] But my point here is that the story is not really a parable,
but an allegory. Under pressure from his thick-headed and
uncomprehending disciples, Jesus readily supplies the meaning: the
seed that falls on the path stands for someone who hears the word
and does not understand it, because the evil one, whom the birds
stand for, snatches it away. The seed that falls on rocky ground
stands for one who hears the word and receives it with joy - but is
so rootless that he/she endures only for a while. The seed that
falls in thorns stands for, etc. In an allegory, everything stands
for something else. One thing corresponds directly to another: A =
X, B = Y, C = Z. Allegories illustrate meaning; parables create it.
The story of the prodigal sower is an allegory; the story of the
Good Samaritan is not.
[9] Nor is the Good Samaritan story really a fable, which
supplies meaning in an aphorism or moral appended at the end, like
the story of the wise and foolish bridesmaids. Ten women are
waiting into the night for the bridegroom make his appearance: five
have oil for their lamps, five do not, and Jesus tells his
listeners what the meaning is at the end: "Keep awake, for you know
neither the day nor the hour." (Matt. 25:13) This is what fables
do: they tell you what you are to conclude, lest there be any
doubt. Fables summarize meaning.
[10] Now we have to conclude that a lot of what we have come to
regard as a "parable" is really either an allegory or a fable in
drag, because a lot of these stories Jesus tells either illustrate
meaning or summarize, both of which deliver the point rather
directly, with no questions and no room for ambiguity. Nothing
remains to debate, nothing is left to the imagination. You know
what you have to do.
[11] Parables, on the other hand, create meaning, and for that
reason, they require work, the work of thought, imagination, and
application. The story that Jesus presents to this lawyer is a
parable. Jesus isn't speaking to his clueless band of disciples,
who need explanation, nor the largely illiterate crowds, who clamor
for a soundbite. He's speaking to a lawyer, and he offers a
parable.
[12] New Testament scholar C.H. Dodd offers probably the most
comprehensive and adequate definition of a parable: "Parable is a
metaphor or simile drawn from nature or common life, arresting the
hearer by its vividness or strangeness, and leaving the mind in
sufficient doubt about its precise application to tease it into
active thought." Precise application in the case of parables is not
summarized by a moral at the end, nor is it given by simply
outlining what stands for what. Meaning in a parabolic world is
gained by imagination and active thought. It demands a search for
patterns, for similarity amidst difference.
[13] In responding to the lawyer's question with a parable,
Jesus offers in effect another case, with contours similar to the
one the lawyer investigates. It is a case Jesus intends the lawyer
to receive as relevant precedent, another case with details similar
to the one at present, but not exactly replicating them. Nothing
stands for anything else, nor can the moral of the story be stated
simply. Here, there are similarities that need to be grappled with,
and that requires the work of thought, imagination, and
application.
[14] Indeed, in responding to this lawyer's question, Jesus
appeals to habits of thought and imagination embedded in the
practice of law. He's speaking to a man who is used to noticing
similarities between seemingly dissimilar cases. He's speaking to a
man whose stock in trade is finding patterns. Mark Twain said:
"History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme." What is the
pattern that the parable of the Good Samaritan inscribes? And how
can I live that pattern in my own life, that is, if I too would be
a neighbor?
[15] This whole exchange is in the Bible because it says
something about discipleship to us - centuries later in a vastly
different time. It marks a point where the practice of law and the
practices of faith intersect: both require a disciplined habit of
thinking analogically. Looking for patterns, catching the rhyme,
finding similarities amidst difference: it's a habit of the legal
mind. Jesus here presents it as a habit disciples ought also to
cultivate, if they would be faithful.
[16] 2. The second point to notice is that Jesus reverses the
lawyer's question and turns it back on him. The lawyer wants to
know who is the neighbor? It is an appropriate question, even a
good question - but it is also one you can ask at arm's length.
Jesus poses a more urgent, even intimate question: Are you yourself
a good neighbor? After all, this is the question the lawyer should
have asked, particularly if he seeks eternal life: "How can I be a
neighbor? How can I act with compassion?"
[17] The lawyer poses an abstract, seemingly objective question
- who is the neighbor? - only to be thrown a question that
interrogates him: "Which of these three - priest, Levite, or
Samaritan - was a neighbor to the man who fell into the hands of
the robbers?" The lawyer answers: "The one who showed him mercy."
Jesus responds: "Go and do likewise."
[18] I love the response, because it is exactly the kind of
response to make to a lawyer. In making it Jesus actually answers
the question that initiated the entire exchange: "What must I do to
inherit eternal life?" More importantly, Jesus answers the question
in a way that a lawyer would be well-equipped to understand. And in
so doing he provides the rest of us disciples with a valuable
framework for practical moral reasoning.
[19] I want to focus for a moment on this framework, which is
familiar to anyone involved in the practice of law. I only wish it
were more familiar to the rest of us, as we struggle to understand
the impact of scripture on the practice of faith.
[20] A key aspect of practical moral reasoning is a focus on the
particulars of any situation. The devil may be in the details - but
you may catch a few angels in the net as well! Attend to details.
The parable of the Good Samaritan is thick with detail. Indeed, a
practitioner in the Ancient Near East would have automatically
supplied detail that is not as apparent to us today. For example,
the man lying by the side of the road is stripped of all clothing,
we are told. Then as now, clothes were an important mark of social
status, education, ethnicity, country of origin; without them a
passerby could not tell whether the man were a Jew, a Samaritan, a
foreigner of some other ilk.
[21] Another detail: the man was "left for dead" - and might
have even been dead. Touching a corpse would have meant ritual
defilement under Jewish law: the priest and Levite judged they
could not afford that. Another detail: Samaritans were hated by the
Jews, which makes this story and the conversation Jesus conducted
with a Samaritan in John's gospel all the more irritating. People
in the original audience of the Gospels would have a fresh memory
of a Samaritan prank on Jews gathered for a festival at the Temple
at Jerusalem. Samaritans had thrown a corpse within the Temple
walls, defiling the entire complex and requiring it to be ritually
purified. It was off-limits for the festival. Samaritans were not
well-liked in Israel. Another detail: inn-keepers were notoriously
untrustworthy, and the arrangement the Samaritan makes with this
one shows deft handling. As arranged the inn-keeper stands to
profit if and only if he renders the best care. Nor can he take the
money and run: the Samaritan will pay the balance of his debt upon
returning. Details drive the story forward.
[22] In relating them Jesus suggests that details matter in the
process of moral deliberation. I'm sure the lawyer in the story and
the lawyers in this room would agree. You can't do moral
deliberation by bludgeoning the opposing side with abstractions.
Details matter in coming to any resolution.
[23] Another crucial aspect of practical moral reasoning is
attention to patterns. How can we catch the rhyme? That's Jesus'
invitation in his final piece of advice: "Go and do likewise." He
invites the lawyer to catch the rhyme in the parable - find the
pattern in this story and live it out in your own life.
[24] Indeed, perhaps the whole of the teaching of Jesus supplies
a taxonomy of cases which offer a certain patterning to the moral
life - if we have eyes to see. For example what is the pattern
behind the observation repeated throughout the gospels of Jesus:
"He was a glutton, a drunkard, a friend of tax collectors and
sinners." This is not intended as a compliment, nor is it the first
thing people go to when probing scripture for moral counsel. But it
says more when understood in the context of the Ancient Near
Eastern etiquette, where the people you ate and drank with were
your friends, and your friends were the people you ate and drank
with. Jesus quite simply ate and drank with all the wrong kinds of
people, at least in the eyes of those speaking. But in so doing he
showed a kind of solidarity with these folks that challenges our
notions of charity, which can often be anonymous, distant, and
removed. Jesus pushed beyond charity toward friendship. He doesn't
merely give money to the poor, food to the hungry, drink to the
thirsty; he eats with them, drinks with them, gets to know them.
Jesus pushes beyond charity to friendship. We ought to go and do
likewise.
[25] That leads me to the final important aspect of the process
of moral deliberation: application to the present. The kind of
legal reasoning Jesus uses with this inquisitive lawyer proceeds by
analogy. The command "Go and do likewise," calls for a kind of
analogical reasoning. What do lawyers do so well but think
analogically, examining legal precedent for patterns that recur,
sifting similarities and differences for common contours, applying
them in a precise way to the present.
[26] "Go and do likewise." Jesus doesn't say go and do exactly
the same thing; he also doesn't say go and do whatever you want. He
avoids both the strict moral geometry which dictates blind
imitation and the tyranny of preference. Instead, Jesus calls for
the lawyer to make the merciful response that would be appropriate
to his own situation and context: the Samaritan in the story showed
mercy; the lawyer in his context should do the same. Mercy - the
biblical word is more visceral, signifying a kind of gut-wrenching
compassion for another - is the fitting response to the parable
Jesus tells. Anyone who would "inherit eternal life" should act in
kind.
[27] Focusing on particulars, attending to patterns, applying
them analogically to the situation at hand: these are the stock in
trade of the practice of law. In highlighting them in this
conversation with a lawyer, Jesus talks to the lawyer in his own
language. He speaks to him in the particular contours of a story,
inviting him to bridge the concrete and general through a finely
honed process of analogical reasoning. In reading this conversation
with a lawyer, we learn that Christians need training in these
legal habits of mind for the life of discipleship. The practices of
law shape the practice of faith.
II. Practices: what they are . . .
[28] I'll suggest a preliminary definition of practices as a
cluster of activities that define a way of life. Because both law
and faith are practices, they demand and sustain certain ways of
life that are public, communal, and fiduciary. I want to examine
each dimension in turn.
[29] A. Both practices are public: You don't practice
law - or faith - in private; indeed, in their very nature, both are
public practices. An illustration, from the practices of faith: In
reforming the church, Luther also had to relocate it. He wanted to
move it away from popes, prelates, and cathedrals. But where was
the church then to be found? Luther located the church in a series
of very public practices: "Where you find people baptizing, where
you find people preaching and hearing the Word, where you find
people praying, praising, catecheizing their young, where you find
people forgiving, where you find people following the way of the
cross, there you find the church." Not a place any longer, nor a
papal institution, Luther relocated the church in a series of
public practices. Where you find people doing these things, you
will find the church. These practices constitute the church, which
is the body of Christ in the world.
[30] This is public witness. The other thing to notice is how
being part of the body of Christ engages the bodies of believers.
Praying, praising, catechizing, preaching, listening, baptizing:
these all involve the body. In a way practices inscribe membership
in the body of Christ on the bodies of the believers. That's what
publicity is all about. Practices of faith gather Christians into
special places and make them do distinctive things: eat together,
drink together, serve the neighbor.
[31] Practices of law are equally public - and I don't mean the
big cars, settlements, and houses. I refer rather to the bodily
markings: making judges wear wigs - even in Kenya, robes. There's
something somatic, bodily in practices: they involve the body and
allow the body to mentor the soul.
[32] B. Practices are communal: As Luther put it:
wherever you find people baptizing.... Practices do not describe
Lone Ranger idiosyncrasies; they delineate group actions, repeated
over time and in community. You can't be a lawyer or a disciple any
way you want. Canons of conduct mark each profession, and they are
enforced by the expectations of those inside and outside the
community. Part of what sustains a practice is the sheer press of
others doing it. Practices involve entrance into a certain kind of
community, and there are - that bodily part again! - rites of
initiation. Think of baptism, which literally marks the body with
oil and water, claiming this person as "child of God," charge of
the community. Think of passing the bar. The communal aspect of
practices sets up dynamic of mutuality: the community both requires
and enables us to be practitioners, whether of faith or of law.
[33] C. Finally, this follow from the prior point. There are
fiduciary dimensions of any practice. Networks of promises
sustain communities, both within the profession and as the
profession relates to the larger world. Look at the network of
promises that emerge in a baptismal liturgy, promises that knit
together infant, community, and the God they worship. It will take
a lifetime to live into those promises and a community to sustain
them. And the community makes promises of its own, pledging
support, nurture, and instruction. If we thought carefully about
the promises that we make during a baptism, it might be a harder
service in which to participate. These are dangerous promises.
[34] Look at the implicit promises that descend upon someone who
passes the bar: admitted to practice in a particular state, uphold
the constitution of the United States and the body of statutory
law. Human communities feed on fiduciary relationship, and perhaps
Jewish philosopher Hannah Arendt has recognized this more clearly
than anyone else. Promise-making curbs against basic human
unpredictability. Because of "the darkness of the human heart,"
promises ensure that we will be the same people tomorrow that we
are today.
[35] Fiduciary relationship sustain human community. Think of
the four crucial service professions, which we require for human
flourishing: the clergy, medicine, education, and law. Each tends a
dimension of life crucial for the common good: the clergy tend to
the care of souls; medicine, the care of the body; education, the
instruction of the mind; law, the protection of justice. People
entrust these professions with these important aspects of the
common good.
[36] That's why it is so devastating when any one of these
professions is eliminated or violated. We see fall-out today in the
Roman Catholic church's sex scandals. Part of the outrage is the
violation of trust: instead of caring for souls, abuser priests
have have damaged them. Or look at the country of Guatemala, a
beautiful landscape with a horrific political history. This is a
country that does not enjoy the rule of law, and judges and lawyers
who seek it find themselves running for their lives. Both these
examples illustrate the fiduciary dimension of professions like
law. Society expects certain competencies and skills, certain
habits of mind and heart from practitioners.
. . . and what they do. . . .
[37] Practices are activities that compose a way of life, and
they have public, communal, and fiduciary dimensions. What do
practices do?
[38] 1. Practices create and sustain relationships. In their
public, communal, and fiduciary dimension. both the practice of law
and the practices of faith are about relationships. You may be many
things to many people, but in the law office, you are professional
to a client. In your role as lawyer you seen as someone who's
pledged to uphold the laws. There's an old story about a rabbi who
asked another to recite the whole of Torah while standing on one
foot. "You shall love the Lord with all your heart and soul and
mind and strength, and you shall love your neighbor as yourself,"
(Mt. 22:38-39) was his reply. These exhortations depict a triadic
relationship bound with love that embraces self, God, and
community.
[39] I didn't exit graduate school as a theologian, but I knew
the practices of being a theologian. Over time and in community, as
I did the kinds of things that a theologian does, I became a
theologian. After all, you don't become a great chess player, by
thinking about it on the way to work each day.
[40] Each of the service professions is directed by a
transcendent value, whether God, justice, health, or wisdom. That
transcendent value orients the profession, so that it doesn't
merely collapse into mere wish fulfillment. As a lawyer you aren't
merely a "hired gun." There are certain cases and certain clients
you won't take, because they conflict with your sense of what the
profession ought to be about. In the same way, there are certain
things you make time for, perhaps a certain proportion of pro bono
work, because these practices embody what the profession does stand
for.
[41] 2. Practices tutor the emotions. Take a time-honored
cultural practice of watching TV. Tune in during Saturday morning,
kiddie-time television, and think about the emotions tutored here.
A fourth-grade class in Portland took notes: there was a violent
act every 60 seconds - kick-boxing or punching, shooting or
slashing. What habits are encouraged in this? Philosopher Sissela
Bok suggests the following: fear, aggression, desensitization to
violence and desire for more. Practices have the potential to
transform or deform the emotions. Just as sinews connect bone to
bone, emotions connect people one to another. They are the
connective tissue of human society: they can build up or tear down
- that's why they need to be tutored.
[42] Practices tutor the emotions. For this reason, St. Benedict
laid emphasis in his rule on the opus Dei, the daily
office of prayer. Within the course of a week, monks would move
through the entire psalter. Imagine the impact this had on the
emotions. The psalmist finds room in a relationship with God for
everything: rejoicing and despair, consolation and abandonment,
judgment and mercy. It is a rich emotional palette, including
perhaps some less favorite colors. Grafting oneself into the world
of the psalms both evokes and tutors the emotions, which bind a
community to God and to one another.
[43] 3. Practices foster perception. They create a certain field
of vision. Philosopher Iris Murdoch - whom I hope will be
remembered by her rich novels and philosophical works, not just for
the tragic descent into Alzheimer's portrayed in by Judi Dench in
Richard Eyre's powerful film "Iris" - wrote that "we can only
choose within the world that we see." She underscores the
importance of perception, and the power of practices to alter
that.
[44] If the world that we see is the Hollywood set of a
spaghetti western people with guys in white hats against the guys
in black ones, then our foreign policy choices will reflect that.
If the world that we see has a history in which the United States
has played a more ambiguous role, then our foreign policy choices
may be more humble, even tentative.
[45] But it's important to worry about how the practices of law
and the practices of faith frame the world. To a pickpocket, all
the world's a pocket. Think about how virtues and vices would be
recorded in the world a pickpocket sees. To a Christian,
particularly a Lutheran, I suspect all the world's a neighbor, with
hand stretched out for the kindness of the neighbor. To a lawyer,
how would the world be framed: as a network of adversaries or
potential adversaries? As a community of people struggling for
justice?
[46] Enough about practices, what they are and do. To summarize,
they are activities that compose a way of life, and as such they
have public, communal, and fiduciary dimensions. As such, they
create and sustain relationship, they tutor the affections, they
shape perception.
III. Where the two practices converge - and
collide
[47] In conclusion, I'd like only to point out a few ways
in which these two practices - law and discipleship - converge and
where they might collide. Convergences first.
[48] Deliberation is common to both the practice of law
and the practice of faith. Indeed, one of the first tasks of this
Division for Church in Society when the ELCA came into being, was
to publish a study guide on moral deliberation: "The Church as a
Community of Moral Deliberation." I think we learn from law a
finely-honed practice of moral deliberation that allows scripture
to fund our moral imagination, so that we find patterns that might
apply analogically to daily life in this 21st century. Scripture
functions then as a flexible ruler, as Aristotle put it. After all,
how else could you gauge the circumference of a rock.
[49] We latter-day disciples would profit from such training. It
might move us from the sort of biblical literalism that approaches
every moral problem by first asking: "What does the Bible say about
it?" Most of the questions we face today aren't referenced in
scripture at all: genetic cloning; the scientific categories for
sexuality - homosexuality, heterosexuality, bi- and transgendered
sexualities; etc. Yet if we could focus on the particularities,
both in biblical situations and in our own, if we were looking for
patterns - and not just "thou shalt" and "thou shalt not"
pronouncements, if we could think analogically about how those
patterns might apply today, we might find a great deal of
guidance.
[50] Some rules will always stand, taboos against murder,
incest, exploitation. As Aristotle put it, some things are always
prohibited. With murder or adultery, it's not a matter of finding
the right time, place, person, and motive. But as always, most of
life happens in those great grey areas, governed by no stark
choices. And most of the world is populated, not by good guys and
bad guys, but people who are mixed - and very often mixed-up. We
occasionally prevaricate; we often dither; we do good things for
bad reasons. If you're an ethicist, it's quite discouraging, unless
you're in ethics for remedial purposes, as I am.
[51] Then, both the practice of law and the practices of
discipleship are ineluctably service professions. Both
attend to the needs of the neighbor, and both respond out of a
knowledge of the neighbor's situation.
[52] A final convergence: both practices are inescapably
formative. Both aim at shaping certain ways of seeing the world and
being in it.
[53] And this may lead to a real divergence: there may be
different aims in that formation. Back to Jesus and the lawyer. The
lawyer acts out of his training: he's skilled at noticing things,
calibrating similarities and differences, perceiving patterns. But
he also reveals an adversarial model of relating to others. He
wants to test Jesus; he wants to "justify himself," the text
reminds us. The adversarial model may still be part of legal
formation. A swimming friend, who is a high-powered litigator and
married to another high-powered litigator, announced in the locker
room that she was moving to another part of the practice. "We can't
have two litigators in the family," she claimed. "Besides, I just
can't switch gears that quickly. I can't be the kind of person I
need to be in the courtroom, and then come home and be Mom, nice to
my kids and my husband." She couldn't easily shake the power of her
professional formation, as she entered other areas of her life.
[54] Practices, whether of law, discipleship, or swimming, shape
people. They have the power to form them; they have the power to
deform them and to transform them. A central question becomes: what
kind of people are we being shaped to be? I have to say the band of
disciples has its own share of competitive, adversarial, and
self-justifying folks. Law doesn't have a corner on those
dispositions. I hope the formation engendered in discipleship is
contoured by the kind of compassion shown not by a Christian, nor
even a Jew - but a Samaritan - at least in the parable Jesus
relates.
[55] Where we lodge our primary identity is crucial. Feminist
Andrea Dworkin speaks to the importance of identity: "The first
identity...is the identity of primary emergency." A Jewess in Nazi
Germany might be disprivileged as a woman, but she would be sought
out and slaughtered as a Jew. Being a Jew, then, would be her first
identity, "the identity of primary emergency." For Christians,
whatever their profession, the identity of primary emergency" is
being a Christian. That ought to orient all other facets of our
lives.
Resources
Dorothy Bass (ed), Practicing Our Faith, San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass, 1977.
John R. Donahue, S.J., The Gospel in Parable,
Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1988.
Albert R. Jonsen and Stephen Toulmin, Abuse of Casuistry: A
History of Moral Reasoning, Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1988.
William C. Spohn, Go and Do Likewise: Jesus and Ethics,
New York: Continuum, 1999.