RT Article T1 Rethinking Justification by Faith Alone in the Era of Globalization: A Confucian Perspective JF Journal of ecumenical studies VO 54 IS 1 SP 47 OP 73 A1 Min, Anselm Kyongsuk 1940- LA English PB University of Pennsylvania Press YR 2019 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1679357689 AB Is it possible to learn something fr om the Confucian tradition that might be relevant to the theological issues that have divided and still divide Catholics and Lutherans, especially on the theology of good works for today? This essay attempts to describe an intercultural theology on an intra-Christian ecumenical issue. I will first present a summary of the dialogue that has been going on for quite a few decades between Catholics and Lutherans and the contemporary significance and challenge of the doctrine of justification in the globalizing world. Today nihilism seems to challenge the very idea of sin, whose forgiveness is at stake in the doctrine and which today must include justice to victims of sin, both our fellow human beings and our fellow creatures in nature. Second, I will offer a Confucian reflection on the value of good works in the context of its compelling sense of the Way of Heaven or Tiandao ([inline-graphic 01]), its politics of virtue and solidarity, and its sense of the cosmic unity of all things as relevant to the contemporary quest for social and ecological justice. Third, I will provide the beginningsĀ—and only the beginningsĀ—of a Catholic dialogue with the Confucian perspective along with brief reflections on the methodology of interreligious learning in the changing context of the contemporary world. K1 Aquinas K1 Catholics K1 Confucianism K1 Dialogue K1 Globalization K1 Good Works K1 Justification (Christian theology) K1 Justification. Catholicism K1 Lutherans K1 Mencius K1 Merit K1 Nihilism K1 Sin K1 Tianrenhei DO 10.1353/ecu.2019.0003