"In this important new update to the debate on power and the Christian life, a generous but sharp-minded dialogue between top scholars will help the confused and the curious understand what's at stake in the means and the aims of just and unjust peace. For both the initiate and the expert, here is a model in tone and a rigor in content that will leave you wishing for more."
"Key to understanding one's own views on a subject is the requirement that one charitably considers legitimate alternatives. These four authors reliably map the terrain on war, peace, and violence in a way that will help readers sort out their own views on these perennial topics. Alas, given the tragic state of our fallen world, this is a much-needed volume."
"In War, Peace, and Violence, Paul Copan assembles a sample of scholars committed to robust defenses of divergent views on the believer's right response to a fallen and violent world. Remarkably, in an age of polarized vitriol, the four authors-representing not only competing Christian traditions but also quite distinct disciplines-demonstrate in their arguments rigor and charity in equal measure. What results is an excellent primer on the current state of a long intrafaith debate over how to hold together our faith and the competing interests shaping the interstate system."
"War, Peace and Violence: Four Christian Views is a very helpful survey of the key positions in this still very relevant subject. The contributors represent their views clearly and well, and the counterarguments are done with respect for the positions with which each disagrees. I highly recommend this for anyone interested in how to think well about war and peace from within a distinctively Christian worldview."
"Like a thorn in the flesh of our conscience, war demands our attention. Reflection on war reveals the inadequacy of simplistic thinking and unsettles easy assumptions about the correspondence between theology and moral life. Thinking particularly of our nation's warfighters and especially in light of our deepening understanding of moral injury-crippling degrees of shame or remorse born of believing you have done evil-it is critical that Christians think rightly about war. The four viewpoints in this book-sometimes overlapping yet distinct in essential ways-offer a crucial overview of the best of Christian thought on war and peace."