How is the silencing of the justice claims of those harmed by modernity's construction of work and economy linked to a widespread culture of forgetting injustice? How is this culture linked to the injustice perpetrated by colonial society against indigenous Australians? How is the church complicit in injustice through its own captivity to the assumptions of modernity, and the forgetting of injustice in its own history? How can worship and the prophetic imagination it articulates become a ground for resistance to the idolatry of hard work?
References
Bottomley, John Hard Work Never Killed Anybody: How The Idolisation Of Work Sustains This Deadly Lie. Northcote: Morning Star Publishing, 2015.
Ergasia Digest #7 - 23.4.18
Episode 14 - The Dream Betrayed, Part II: Religion and the Realities of Class
Ergasia Digest #6 - 18.3.18
Ergasia Special Episode No.1 - Work As Worship Retreat: A Conference Review, Part 2
Ergasia Special Episode No.1 - Work As Worship Retreat: A Conference Review, Part 1
Ergasia Digest #5 - 4.3.18
Ergasia Digest #4 - 24.2.18
Episode 13 - The Dream Betrayed, Part I: The Dilemma Of The Working Class
Ergasia Digest #3 - 24.12.17
Ergasia Digest #2 - 21.12.17
Ergasia Digest #1 - 9.12.17
Episode 12 - Dead Man Working, Part V: A (Further) Theological Reflection
Episode 11 - Dead Man Working, Part IV: A Theological Reflection
Episode 10 - Dead Man Working, Part III: Exit Strategies
Episode 9 - Dead Man Working, Part II: The Girlfriend Effect
Episode 8 - Dead Man Working, Part I: The World of the Living Dead
Episode 7 - What Is Work? Part V
Episode 6 - What Is Work? Part IV
Episode 5 - What Is Work? Part III
Episode 4 - What Is Work? Part II
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Life After Ministry
Cast The Word
Let Me Be Frank | Bishop Frank Caggiano’s Podcast | Diocese of Bridgeport, CT
The Bible Recap
The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz)