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A review by Giacomo Costa of: Angelo Tosato, The Gospel and wealth: new exegetical perspectives, Dario Antiseri, Francesco D’Agostino, Angelo Petroni (Editors), in Markets and Morality, Vol.6, n.2, 2003, pp. 689-691.

Abstract

This is an important collection of essays, or rather short, synthetic monographs, by a talented Italian Catholic biblical scholar, Angelo Tosato. (Some of his previous studies were published in the Catholic Biblical Quarterly). The author had planned a study on “The Gospel and freedom”: after his untimely death in 1999, Messes Antiseri, D’Agostino and Petroni have made a careful selection some of his extant pertinent essays, which form a surprisingly coherent whole, albeit with some repetitions. That the relationship between Gospel and wealth is of prima facie opposition should be the starting point of any serious discussion: “One may come across important books (such as The spirit of democratic capitalism by Michael Novak) or long magisterial documents (such as Centesimus Annus) devoted precisely to this subject, and specifically aiming at throwing a bridge between the two, only to find that not a word is spent on this basic problem.” This opposition is but an aspect of a more general one: “The Gospel proposes a religious liberation, to be achieved in a religious way. This way is different, and seemingly incompatible, with the liberation proposed by liberalism. On those who want to maintain the compatibility between the two lies the burden of facing the intimations to the contrary that seem to issue from the Christian canonical sources.” As most contemporary Christian theologians, Tosato believes that the Gospel is relevant to our life in this world. As a liberal, he is convinced that in this world we have to tackle a multi-dimensional liberation task, one side of which is economic liberation, to be carried out by full participation to productive activities and markets. Tosato distinguishes sharply between exegesis and hermeneutics. The dissolution of the supposed opposition between the Gospel and wealth should be accomplished by the former; the development of a Christian economic ethics is a task of the latter

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