We Answer to Another: Authority Office and the Image of God


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About The Book

The quest to escape authority has been a persistent feature of the modern world animating liberals and Marxists Westerners and non-Westerners alike. Yet what if it turns out that authority is intrinsic to humanity? What if authority is characteristic of everything we are and do as those created in Gods image even when we claim to be free of it? What if kings and commoners teachers and students employers and employees all possess authority? This book argues that authority cannot be identified with mere power is not to be played off against freedom and is not a mere social construction. Rather it is resident in an office given us by God himself at creation. This central office is in turn dispersed into a variety of offices relevant to our different life activities in a wide array of communal settings. Far from being a conservative bromide the call to respect authority is foundational to respect for humanity itself. In this timely and highly valuable book Koyzis exposes the problems and points the way to solid balanced answers. The subtitle of We Answer to Another sums it up: Authority Office and the Image of God. Humans have been created in the image of God and called to serve the Creator--the One to whom we are ultimately accountable. To exercise a responsibility is to hold an office of real authority as servant-stewards of one another. We can thus participate in holding one another accountable to the responsibilities of those offices. Sound old-fashioned? Its the most contemporary word of wisdom we and our neighbors throughout the world need to hear today! --James W. Skillen President Emeritus Center for Public Justice Liberal societies regarding themselves as premised on the generative moral autonomy of the individual have a constitutive problem with authority--freedom needs no justification only authority. In this highly illuminating wide-ranging and exceptionally clear book David Koyzis shows how this view not only destabilizes authority but actually diminishes our humanity. Authority is not autonomy but responsible agency exercised individually and corporately in many diverse human settings--offices--that arise from our being created in Gods image. Recovering authority as answering to another makes us more not less human. --Jonathan Chaplin Director of the Kirby Laing Institute for Christian Ethics Cambridge David T. Koyzis is Professor of Political Science at Redeemer University College Ancaster Ontario Canada. He is the author of the award-winning Political Visions and Illusions (2003).
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