7. Rawls, A Theory of Justice.
8. Rawls, Justice as Fairness.
9. For example Ricoeur, The Just.
10 Lebacqz, Six Theories of Justice.
11. Walzer, Spheres of Justice, 5.
12. Ibid., xiii. How this freedom is advanced remains a significant challenge.
13. Ricoeur, The Just, 81.
14. Taylor, A Secular Age, 706 .
15. Ricoeur, The Just, 129.
16. Taylor, A Secular Age, 684.
17. Passmore, “Civil Justice and Its Rivals,” 47–48.
18. Volf, “Demons or Evildoers?,” 27.
19. MacIntyre, Whose Justice? Which Rationality, 391.
20. O’Donovan, The Ways of Judgment, 33.
21. Wolterstorff, Justice: Rights and Wrongs, 35.
22. Volf, Exclusion and Embrace, 196.
23. Marshall, “The Christology of Luke’s Gospel and Acts,” 122.
24. A recent survey of the approaches to interpreting Luke-Acts can be found in Green, Methods for Luke.
25. Dunn, New Testament Theology, 13.
26. Litwak, Echoes of Scripture in Luke-Acts, 31. Luke’s use of Isaiah is widely attested and detailed arguments can be found in Mallen, The Reading and Transformation of Isaiah in Luke-Acts. See also Moberly, “Isaiah and Jesus.”
27. Campbell, The Deliverance of God, 89–95.
28. The original phrase and the fourfold concerns were inspired by Stassen, “The kind of justice Jesus cares about,” 157ff.
29. Exemplified by contributions such as Marshall, “Terrorism, Religious Violence and Restorative Justice.”
30. Myers and Enns, Ambassadors of Reconciliation, vol. I.
31. Volf, Captive to the Word of God, 14.
32. For example Fowl, Theological Interpretation of Scripture.
33. Saunders and Campbell, The Word on the Street.
34. Broughton, “Reading the Bible through the Lens of the Street,” 103–5.
35. Dykstra and Myers, Liberating Biblical Study.
36. Ibid., xxiii.
37. Marshall, The Little Book of Biblical Justice, 35–47.
38. Braithwaite, Crime, Shame and Reintegration.
39. O’Connell et al., Conferencing Handbook.
40. Zehr, “Evaluation and Restorative Justice Principles.”
41. Marshall, “Reflections on the Spirit of Justice.”
42. Marshall, Beyond Retribution, 259.
43. Umbreit and Armour, Restorative Justice Dialogue, 18–21.
44. Minogue, “Inside My Skull,” 14–15.
45. Tutu, No Future without Forgiveness, 47–52. Lorenzen, “Justice and Truth,” 282–84.
46. Marshall, Beyond Retribution, 93.
47. For example Van Ness and Strong, Restoring Justice, 8–9.
48. Isaiah 58:6, “Is not this the fast that I choose: to loose the bonds of injustice, to undo the thongs of the yoke, to let the oppressed go free, and to break every yoke?”
49. See Marshall, Compassionate Justice. Myers and Enns, Ambassadors of Reconciliation.
50. Johnstone and Van Ness, “The Meaning of Restorative Justice,” 5–23. See also Van Ness and Strong, Restoring Justice, 14.
51. Zehr, The Little Book of Restorative Justice, 37.
52. Braithwaite, Restorative Justice and Responsive Regulation, 1.
53. Tutu, No Future without Forgiveness, 54–55.