Brian Hamilton
What I’m writing
I write on a range of topics in social ethics and the history of Christian moral thought. Right now, most of my energy is going towards a book I’m tentatively calling Moral Failure: An Impractical Theology. I’m also writing occasionally about ethics pedagogy and about the medieval Franciscans.
Moral Failure
One of the main implications of the Christian notion of original sin is that moral failure is inevitable. That’s a hard pill to swallow, but I think it’s both true and practically significant. I’m writing a book that argues the point. I’ve written several papers related to this project:
- “Structural Ignorance,” presented to the Society of Christian Ethics (2022)
- “It’s In You: Structural Sin and Personal Responsibility Revisited,” Studies in Christian Ethics 34, no. 3 (2021)
- “Microaggressions as Violence,” Practical Matters 13 (2020)
- “Navigating Moral Struggle,” Journal of Religious Ethics 47, no. 3 (2019)
I’ve got the bulk of the book manuscript drafted (though much of it is still very messy), and I am working back through it right now and revising everything.
Teaching Ethics
I am increasingly interested in questions about ethics pedagogy. What is the place of ethics courses in the university? What, if anything, do such courses accomplish? What does it look like to teach ethics well? I have recently written a couple of papers on this topic. They both have some conceptual relationship with my moral failure project, since I am especially interested in the place of ignorance in the classroom.
- “What are we teaching when we teach moral reasoning?” presented to the Society of Christian Ethics (2024) and currently under revision.
- “AI and the Pedagogy of Ignorance,” presented to the Society for Ethics Across the Curriculum (2023) and now under review with Teaching Ethics.
Franciscan Poverty
I wrote my dissertation on the medieval Franciscans, and I still write about them occasionally. I hope one day to write a book arguing that their rendition of voluntary poverty carried serious political weight. If you’re interested, you can read the working preface to that book. But in the meantime, I’ve written a few pieces that develop some of my thinking.
- “Trust, Vulnerability, Power: Aspects of a Franciscan Style,” forthcoming in a volume to be published by the Franciscan Institute (2023)
- “Poverty,” in The Routledge Handbook of Economic Theology (2020)
- “The Politics of Poverty: A Contribution to a Franciscan Political Theology,” Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 35, no. 1 (2015)
Public Writing
- “On Not Knowing Greek,” Comment (September 22, 2022)
- “Enemies of the Poor,” Comment (March 10, 2022)
- “What We Miss When We Say ‘Accountability, Not Justice’,” Sojourners (May 10, 2021)
- “Good Intentions Can’t Redeem Voluntary Ignorance,” Sojourners (July 1, 2020)
- With Kyle Lambelet, “Engage survivors more, and Yoder less,” National Catholic Reporter (Feb. 29, 2016)
Book Reviews
- Tim Judson, Awake in Gethsemane: Bonhoeffer and the Christian Witness of Lament (Baylor, 2023)
- Paul Griffiths, Regret: A Theology (Notre Dame, 2021
- Norbert Duckwitz, Reading the Gospel of St. John in Greek (Bolchazy-Carducci, 2022)
- Hak Joon Lee, God and Community Organizing (Baylor, 2020)
- Giorgio Agamben, The Highest Poverty (Stanford, 2013)
- Joint review of Daniel Finn (ed.), The Moral Dynamics of Economic Life (Oxford, 2012), and James Bailey, Rethinking Poverty (Notre Dame, 2010)