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9780800637965

Modern Christian Thought : The Twentieth Century

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780800637965

  • ISBN10:

    0800637968

  • Edition: 2nd
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2006-07-01
  • Publisher: Fortress Pr

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Summary

This widely acclaimed introduction to modern Christian thought, formerly published by Prentice Hall, provides full, scholarly accounts of the major movements and thinkers, theologians and philosophers in the Christian tradition since the eighteenth-century Enlightenment, together with solid historical background and critical assessments. This second edition deals with the entire modern period, in both Europe and America, and is the first to include extensive treatment of modern Catholic thinkers, Evangelical thought, and Black and Womanist theology.Visit the companion Web site at www.modernchristiantext.com

Author Biography

James C. Livingston is Professor of Religious Studies Emeritus at the College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia Francis Schussler Fiorenza is Charles Chauncy Stillman Professor of Roman Catholic Studies at Harvard Divinity School Sarah Coakley is Edwin Mallinckrodt Professor of Divinity at Harvard Divinity School James H. Evans Jr. is Robert K. Davies Professor of Systematic Theology at the Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School

Table of Contents

Preface xiv
Chapter One The Legacy of Modernity and the New Challenges of Historical Theology 1(32)
The Legacy of Modernity
1(9)
The Question of Authority
2(1)
The Development of Doctrine and the Essence of Christianity
3(3)
Knowledge of God and God and World
6(2)
Christianity and Other World Faiths
8(1)
History, the Historical Jesus, and Christology
9(1)
The New Challenges of Historical Theology
10(7)
Religionswissenschaft
11(1)
The Eschatological Interpretation of Weiss and Schweitzer
12(1)
The Religionsgeschichtliche Schule
13(2)
Form Criticism
15(2)
Ernst Troeltsch
17(16)
Historicism, the Science of Religion, and Theology
19(1)
The Absoluteness of Christianity
20(3)
What Does "Essence of Christianity" Mean?
23(2)
The Historical Jesus, Faith, and Christology
25(8)
Chapter Two American Empirical and Naturalistic Theology 33(29)
Introduction
34(1)
Radical Empiricism and Religion: William James
34(8)
Experience, Pragmatism, and the "Will to Believe"
35(3)
"The Varieties of Religious Experience": An Empirical Exploration
38(4)
American Empirical Theology: Douglas Clyde Macintosh
42(5)
Macintosh's Method
42(3)
Normative Theology and Christian Belief
45(2)
American Theological Modernism and Naturalism: Henry Nelson Wieman
47(15)
Background: John Dewey and the Chicago School
47(1)
Henry Nelson Wieman
48(14)
Chapter Three The Dialectical Theology: Karl Barth, Emil Brunner, and Friedrich Gogarten 62(34)
The Beginnings of Dialectical Theology
63(8)
Liberal Theology: History and Interpretation
67(4)
Major Themes in Karl Barth's Theology of the Word of God
71(4)
The Dialectical Method
71(1)
God as Wholly Other
72(1)
The Strange World of the Bible
73(2)
The Breakdown of the Dialectical Theology
75(2)
Emil Brunner
77(7)
Anthropology and the Apologetic Task
79(1)
Revelation as Encounter and Truth
80(4)
Friedrich Gogarten
84(12)
The Christian Understanding of the World and Secularization
85(3)
The Historicizing of Human Existence
88(1)
Demythologizing and History
89(7)
Chapter Four The Theologies of Karl Barth and Dietrich Bonhoeffer 96(37)
Karl Barth
97(14)
The Development of Karl Barth's Theology
97(2)
"Political Theology": Barth and the Question of a Christian Social Ethics
99(5)
The Major Themes in Barth's Church Dogmatics
104(5)
The Reception and Critique of Barth's Theology
109(2)
Dietrich Bonhoeffer
111(22)
Bonhoeffer's Early Writings and the Relationship with Karl Barth
113(3)
The Christological Concentration
116(3)
Discipleship and Ethics
119(5)
The World Come of Age and a Religionless Christianity
124(3)
Bonhoeffer's Legacy
127(6)
Chapter Five Christian Existentialism 133(32)
Key Existentialist Themes
134(4)
Existence Precedes Essence
134(1)
The Critique of Rational Objectivity
135(1)
Authentic and Inauthentic Existence
136(2)
Gabriel Marcel
138(2)
Paul Tillich
140(13)
The Existential Starting Point
141(2)
The Method of Correlation
143(1)
Humanity's Existential Situation
143(3)
Being, God, and Being-Itself
146(1)
Existence and the New Being in Jesus as the Christ
147(4)
The Spirit's Presence and Morality
151(2)
Rudolf Bultmann
153(8)
God's Action and Faith
155(2)
Demythologizing the New Testament
157(4)
Conclusion
161(4)
Chapter Six Christian Realism: A Post-Liberal American Theology 165(32)
Introduction
165(2)
H. Richard Niebuhr
167(8)
Human Faith and Faith in God
169(2)
The Confessional Method: Inner and Outer History
171(4)
Reinhold Niebuhr
175(22)
The Nature of the Self
177(4)
The Dramas of History
181(5)
Love, Justice, and Power
186(11)
Chapter Seven The New Theology and Transcendental Thomism 197(36)
Francis Schüssler Fiorenza
The Background and Context of the Nouvelle Théologie
198(4)
Neo-Scholasticism as a Phenomenon of Modernity
198(2)
Pierre Rousselot
200(1)
Joseph Marechal and Modern Philosophy
200(2)
Critical Issues
202(1)
Henri de Lubac and the Nouvelle Theologie
202(3)
The Supernatural
203(1)
Interpretation of the Senses of Scripture
204(1)
Theological Conflict
205(1)
Karl Rahner
205(9)
Spirit in the World and Hearers of the Word
207(1)
The Religious Dimension of Human Experience
208(1)
The Supernatural Existential
209(1)
Revelation as Transcendental and as Categorical
210(1)
Rahner's Theological Method
211(1)
The Symbol
212(1)
Critical Issues
213(1)
Bernard Lonergan
214(7)
Critical Realism
214(2)
A New Ideal of Knowledge
216(1)
The Question of God
217(1)
Method in Theology: Functional Specialties
218(1)
Conversion
219(1)
Religion and Theology
220(1)
Critical Issues
220(1)
Edward Schillebeeckx
221(6)
Sacramental Theology
222(1)
Jesus as Eschatological Prophet
223(1)
Method of Correlation
224(1)
The Conflict over Ministry
225(2)
Critical Issues
227(1)
Conclusion
227(6)
Chapter Eight Vatican II and the Aggiornamento of Roman Catholic Theology 233(40)
Francis Schüssler Fiorenza
Yves Congar
233(3)
True Reform and the Resources of the Tradition
234(1)
The Role of the Laity and France's Catholic Action Movement
235(1)
Church as Communio
235(1)
John XXIII
236(1)
Vatican II
237(10)
Vatican II's Understanding of the Church
238(2)
The Church and the Liturgy
240(1)
The Tensions and Compromises in the Understanding of the Church
240(2)
The Church and Its Relation to the World
242(2)
Biblical Historical Criticism
244(1)
Religious Pluralism, Freedom, and Ecumenism
245(2)
Hans Küng
247(5)
Justification and the Dialogue with Karl Barth
247(1)
Kung's Interpretation of Vatican II
248(1)
Structures of the Church
249(1)
On Being a Christian
249(1)
Papal Infallibility, Birth Control, and Religious Affirmations
250(1)
Philosophical Theology and Comparative Religion
251(1)
Critical Issues
252(1)
John Courtney Murray and Religious Freedom
252(4)
The Two Contrasting Views
254(1)
Murray's Contribution
255(1)
Hans von Balthasar
256(4)
Analogy of Being and Karl Barth
257(1)
Theological Aesthetics
258(1)
From Theo-Drama to Theo-Logic
259(1)
Critical Issues
260(1)
Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger
260(4)
From Church as People of God to Church as Body of Christ
261(1)
The Optimism and Modernism of Vatican II
261(1)
Theology of the Cross or Theology of Incarnation
262(1)
Religious Pluralism and Moral Relativism
263(1)
Conclusion: The Aftermath of Vatican II
264(9)
Chapter Nine Political Theology and Latin American Liberation Theologies 273(36)
Francis Schüssler Fiorenza
Political Theology
273(5)
The Post—World War II Context
274(1)
Interpretation of the Situation: The Privatization of Religion
275(1)
The Critique of a Dominant Existential Theology
276(1)
The Emphasis on Eschatology
277(1)
Johann Metz
278(5)
Political Theology as Fundamental Theology
279(1)
The Critique of Bourgeois Religion
280(1)
The Memory of Suffering and the Holocaust
281(1)
Assessment: Political without Politics
282(1)
Jürgen Moltmann
283(5)
Promise and Hope
283(1)
The Crucified God and the Doctrine of the Trinity
284(3)
Critical Issues
287(1)
Latin American Liberation Theology
288(4)
The Context: From Development to Liberation
288(1)
Interpretation of the Situation: Dependency
289(1)
Previous Theology
290(1)
Eschatology
291(1)
Gustavo Gutiérrez
292(3)
Gutierrez's Interpretation of the Historical Jesus
292(1)
The Nature of the Church
293(1)
The Meaning of Liberation and Salvation
294(1)
Questions
294(1)
Juan Luis Segundo
295(3)
Faith and Ideology
295(2)
The Hermeneutical Circle
297(1)
A Critical Question: The Difference from Feminist Theology
297(1)
Leonardo Boff
298(2)
The Church as Sacrament of the Spirit
298(1)
Social Analysis and the Church
299(1)
Future Directions in Liberation Theology
300(1)
Conclusion
300(9)
Chapter Ten Process Theology 309(32)
Background
309(1)
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
310(2)
Henri Bergson
312(1)
Alfred North Whitehead
312(4)
Charles Hartshorne
316(4)
Schubert Ogden
320(7)
The Task of Christian Theology
321(2)
Ogden's Later Reflections on Analogy, the Normative Christian Witness, and a Christology of Liberation
323(4)
John B. Cobb, Jr.
327(8)
The God Who Calls and Human Possibility
328(4)
Christ and Creative Transformation
332(1)
Theology and "Praxis": Ecological Theology as Example
333(2)
Conclusion
335(6)
Chapter Eleven History and Hermeneutics 341(46)
Francis Schüssler Fiorenza
Wolfhart Pannenberg
342(7)
Revelation as History
342(1)
The Resurrection of Jesus Christ: Historical and Retroactive
343(2)
Theology as an Intellectual Discipline
345(1)
Anthropology as Fundamental Theology
346(1)
Metaphysics and Systematic Theology
347(1)
Critical Issues: The Rationality of Faith
348(1)
Hans-Georg Gadamer
349(8)
The Critique of Historicism and Romanticism
350(1)
Recasting the Hermeneutical Circle
351(1)
Hermeneutics of Belonging: Key Concepts
352(1)
Self-Understanding, the New Testament, and Marburg Theology
353(1)
Critical Issues: Gadamer in Dialogue and Confrontation
354(3)
Paul Ricoeur
357(6)
Phenomenology and the Symbols of Evil
358(1)
The Hermeneutical Turn: From Symbol to Metaphor
359(1)
Hermeneutics of Objectification: Key Concepts
360(1)
Religious Language and Forms of Discourse
361(1)
Narrative and Hermeneutics
362(1)
Critical Issues
363(1)
David Tracy
363(6)
Theological Method and Fundamental Theology
363(1)
The Method of Correlation and Revisionist Theology
364(2)
Publics and Modes of Argument
366(1)
The Theological Reception of Hermeneutical Theory
367(1)
Religion and Ambiguity
368(1)
Critical Issues
368(1)
Hans Frei
369(7)
The Critique of Modern Historical Criticism
370(2)
Narrative and Identity
372(1)
Against Correlation Theology
373(1)
Redescription and Thick Description
374(1)
Critical Issues
375(1)
Conclusion
376(11)
Chapter Twelve Evangelical Theology 387(30)
Background
387(1)
The Fundamentalist Defense of the Faith
388(2)
The "New Evangelicalism"
390(3)
Gerrit Cornelius Berkouwer
393(8)
Co-Relationship
394(1)
Holy Scripture
395(2)
The Doctrine of Providence, Election, and Reprobation
397(2)
The Last Things and Universalism
399(2)
Carl F.H. Henry
401(7)
The Bible, Revelation, and Authority
402(6)
New Theological Soundings
408(9)
Chapter Thirteen Feminist Theology 417(26)
Sarah Coakley
Introduction: The Context of Twentieth-Century Feminist Theology
417(2)
Mary Daly: The Move to "Post-Christian" Feminist Theology
419(4)
Elisabeth Schassler Fiorenza: Jesus and the "Discipleship of Equals"
423(5)
Sallie McFague: Reconceiving God and Gender
428(5)
Luce Irigaray: Feminist Philosophy and the Critique of Freud
433(4)
Conclusion: "Difference" in Feminist Theology
437(6)
Chapter Fourteen Black Theology in America 443(26)
James H. Evans, Jr.
Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Civil Rights Movement in the United States
443(5)
The Contexts of Black Theology in America
448(8)
The Historical Context
448(2)
The Cultural Context
450(1)
The Social Context
451(2)
The Black Manifesto
453(3)
James H. Cone's Black Theology of Liberation
456(4)
The Central Affirmations of Cone's Black Theology of Liberation
456(4)
Black Womanist Theology: Texts, Traditions, and Trajectories
460(15)
Texts: Womanist Interpretations of the Bible
461(1)
Traditions: The Meaning of Jesus Christ in Womanist Theology
462(2)
Trajectories: Womanist Moral and Ethical Thought
464(5)
Chapter Fifteen Theology of Religions: Christian Responses to Other Faiths 469(24)
Introduction
469(2)
Exclusivism
471(4)
Roman Catholic Positions
475(4)
Views Prior to Vatican II
475(1)
The Inclusive Way of Karl Rahner
476(3)
Theological Defenses of Religious Pluralism
479(8)
Stanley Samartha
480(1)
Wilfred Cantwell Smith
481(3)
John Hick
484(3)
Illustrations of the New Christian Interreligious Dialogue
487(6)
Chapter Sixteen Christian Thought at the End of the Twentieth Century 493(42)
The Modern and the Postmodern
494(1)
Gordon D. Kaufman: Theology as Imaginative Construction
495(5)
Radical and Conservative Postmodern Theologies: Thomas J.J. Altizer, Mark C. Taylor, and Jean-Luc Marion
500(6)
Thomas J.J. Altizer
500(3)
Mark C. Taylor
503(1)
Jean-Luc Marion: A Conservative Postmodern Theology
504(2)
Reformed Epistemology: The Critique of Modern Foundationalism and Evidentialism
506(5)
Alvin Plantinga
507(2)
Nicholas Wolterstorff
509(2)
The Wittgensteinian Trajectory
511(8)
Ludwig Wittgenstein
511(3)
The Wittgensteinians
514(5)
Postliberal Theology
519(7)
George Lindbeck
520(3)
Stanley Hauerwas
523(3)
Conclusion
526(9)
Acknowledgments 535(2)
Index 537

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