fbpx
Wikipedia

Postliberal theology

Postliberal theology (often called narrative theology) is a Christian theological movement that focuses on a narrative presentation of the Christian faith as regulative for the development of a coherent systematic theology. Thus, Christianity is an overarching story, with its own embedded culture, grammar, and practices, which can be understood only with reference to Christianity's own internal logic.[1]

The movement became popular in the late twentieth century, primarily among scholars associated with Yale Divinity School.[2] Supporters challenge assumptions of the Enlightenment and modernity, such as foundationalism and the belief in universal rationality,[3] by speaking in terms of Ludwig Wittgenstein's concept of language-games.[4] They argue that the biblical narrative challenges the dominant presuppositions of liberalism and liberal Christianity, including its emphasis on the autonomous individual.[5]

History

Postliberal theology arose amongst scholars who either taught or studied at Yale Divinity School, such as George Lindbeck, Hans Wilhelm Frei, and alumnus Stanley Hauerwas. It is sometimes referred to as the "Yale school" or "narrative theology."[6] The term "postliberal theology" came about shortly after the publication of Linbeck's The Nature of Doctrine: Religion and Theology in a Postliberal Age (1984).[7]

The movement is theologically influenced by Karl Barth, Thomas Aquinas, and to some extent, the nouvelle théologie of French Catholics such as Henri de Lubac. The clear philosophical influence, however, was Ludwig Wittgenstein's philosophy of language, the moral philosophy of Alasdair MacIntyre, and the sociological insights of Clifford Geertz and Peter Berger on the nature of communities. Philosophers of science such as Thomas Kuhn and literary theorists such as Erich Auerbach also influenced the new approach.[8]

This movement has influenced other movements, such as radical orthodoxy, scriptural reasoning, paleo-orthodoxy, the emerging church movement, and postliberal expressions of evangelical Protestantism and Roman Catholicism. Its ecumenical spirit originates from Lindbeck's work, which was partly animated by his involvement as a Lutheran observer at the Second Vatican Council.[8]

Theological platform

Partly a reaction to the trends of theological liberalism, postliberal theology roots rationality not in the certainty of the individual thinking subject (cogito ergo sum, "I think, therefore I am") but in the language and culture of a living tradition of communal life. The postliberals argue that the Christian faith be equated with neither the religious feelings of romanticism nor the propositions of a rationalist or fundamentalist approach to religion and theology. Rather, the Christian faith is understood as a culture and a language, in which doctrines are likened to a "depth grammar" for the first-order language and culture (practices, skills, habits) of the church that is historically shaped by the continuous, regulated reading of the scriptural narrative over time. Thus, in addition to a critique of theological liberalism, and an emphasis upon the Bible, there is also a stress upon tradition, and upon the language, culture, and intelligibility intrinsic to the Christian community. As a result, postliberal theologies are often oriented around the scriptural narrative as a script to be performed, understand orthodox dogmas (esp. the creeds) as depth-grammars for Christian life, and see such scriptural and traditional grammars as a resource for both Christian self-critique and culture critique.

The early postliberals followed Karl Barth's view that the best apologetic is a good systematic, and as such believed that Christians should "not engage in systematic apologetics. Postliberal theologians will make ad hoc connections with the philosophy or art or miscellaneous experience of the cultures around them, but they do not believe that any non-Christian framework, philosophical or cultural, sets the context in which Christian claims must be defended." However, later postliberals have qualified this aversion and have seriously tempered its initial concerns over both apologetics and metaphysics.[a] In this way, postliberal theologies have largely replicated earlier 20th-century debates surrounding the notion of the "analogy of being" (cf. Hans Urs von Balthasar, The Theology of Karl Barth). Unlike the pluralistic liberal trend preceding it, postliberal theology also tends to stress the dissimilarities between religious worldviews,[8] and will often strike out against dominant cultural trends.

Scriptural interpretation remains fundamental for postliberal theology. There are at least four key exegetical differences between liberal and postliberal theology. First, liberal interpretation of Scripture is done with a preoccupation with the historical context, whereas postliberal interpretation is "an act of imagination", interpreting the text with the needs of the reading sub-community in the forefront. Liberal theology deals with aiming to understand the text as it would have applied to the past. Using a non-foundationalist approach, postliberal interpretation aims to interpret the text as it should be applied now and in the future. Second, liberal theologians stress dependence on unbiased reason to ensure finding the objective meaning of the text. Postliberal theologians, however, recognize the impossibility of reading without imposing subjective interpretation of the text by the reader, where such a notion of objective reading disintegrates. Third, "we read texts as bodied interpreters fully situated in some body politic." That is, each and every meaning is, to a certain degree, relative to the reader and their own set of contexts. Finally, because reading is always done with a concern for the sub-community, postliberal interpretation always contains a normative element, encouraging an active response. Liberal interpretation, on the other hand, centre around time- and situation-independent truths that do not necessarily impel the reader to act.[9] More typical of postliberal theologies today, however, is a return to patristic and medieval hermeneutical models for reading scripture theologically, uniting historical-grammatical and spiritual-figurative-allegorical senses into a coherent and faithful understanding of Scripture. The Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible is one example of postliberal scriptural interpretation at work.

Ronald T. Michener argues that there are five characteristics common amongst expressions of postliberal theology:

  1. Non-foundationalist
  2. Intra-textual
  3. Socially centred
  4. Respects plurality and diversity
  5. Embraces a generous orthodoxy[10]

Criticisms

Critics of postliberalism often have been concerned with its "post-foundational" aspects. Similar to the criticism of postmodern philosophical systems, critics[who?] wonder how one postliberal theology can be measured up against another to determine which is better, more appropriate, closer to truth. Postliberal theology's divorcing itself from historical necessity and objective consideration is viewed negatively by many conservative Christians.[who?] Additionally, critics wonder what implications such allegedly relativistic views, such as the possibility of religious pluralism, might have for Christianity.[11] Though influential on a generation of young pastors, the movement has had a hard time finding grass-roots support within mainline Protestant denominations, many of which face vicious liberal–conservative pressures and rifts, something the movement tends to dismiss as a sign of cultural accommodation. Some critics have suggested that because the movement has largely rejected a "mediating" theology (thus, rendering it mostly inaccessible to laypeople), it is difficult to implement its tenets on the local congregational level, so postliberalism remains largely an academic specialty, much like preceding movements such as neo-orthodoxy. Later postliberal theologies have, however, made mediation a central concern[b] and grassroots groups like the Ekklesia Project can be seen to cut across the face of such criticisms.

Debates have been centred on issues of incommensurability, sectarianism, fideism, relativism, truth, and ontological reference. A number of works have sought to resolve these questions to various degrees of satisfaction[c] and the debates continue across the theological disciplines. Furthermore, critics[who?] have maintained that the internal coherence model postliberal theologians assume is difficult to square with developments in modern science which would seem to challenge the tenets of traditional, orthodox Christianity (e.g. the new physics, or evolution), yet such criticisms neglect the ways in which the postliberal view of doctrines as depth-grammars (inscribing the rules of the faith articulated at Nicea and Chalcedon) provide dynamic ways of relating the truths of faith to truths of scientific discovery. Likewise, Bruce Marshall and others have developed postliberal approaches to truth that resemble the "moderate realism" of the medieval correspondence theory of truth (e.g. Thomas Aquinas).

See also

Notes

  1. ^ For example, see Griffiths 1991 and Hauerwas 2002.
  2. ^ For example, see Milbank 1990.
  3. ^ For example, see Pecknold 2005, Vanhoozer 2005, and DeHart 2006.

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Dorrien, Gary (2001). "A Third Way in Theology? The Origins of Postliberalism". The Christian Century. Vol. 118, no. 20. ISSN 0009-5281. Retrieved 9 March 2018 – via Religion Online.
  2. ^ Gazal 2016, p. 487.
  3. ^ Olson, Roger E. (1996). "Back to the Bible (Almost)". Christianity Today. Vol. 40, no. 6. ISSN 0009-5753. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  4. ^ Ashford 2007.
  5. ^ Willimon, William H. (1987). "Answering Pilate: Truth and the Postliberal Church". The Christian Century. Vol. 104, no. 3. pp. 82–85. ISSN 0009-5281. Retrieved 9 March 2018 – via Religion Online.
  6. ^ Placher, William C. (1999). "Being Postliberal: A Response to James Gustafson". The Christian Century. Vol. 116, no. 11. pp. 390–392. ISSN 0009-5281. Retrieved 9 March 2018 – via Religion Online.
  7. ^ Lindbeck 1984.
  8. ^ a b c Placher 1997.
  9. ^ Brueggemann 2005.
  10. ^ Michener 2013, p. 4.
  11. ^ Gustafson, James M. (1999). "Just What Is 'Postliberal' Theology". The Christian Century. Vol. 116, no. 10. pp. 353–355. ISSN 0009-5281. Retrieved 9 March 2018.

Bibliography

  • Ashford, Bruce R. (2007). "Wittgenstein's Theologians? A Survey of Ludwig Wittgenstein's Impact on Theologians" (PDF). Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society. 50 (2): 357–375. ISSN 1745-5251. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  • Brueggemann, Walter (2005). "The Re-Emergence of Scripture: Post-Liberalism". In Ballard, Paul; Holmes, Stephen R. (eds.). The Bible in Pastoral Practice: Readings in the Place and Function of Scripture in the Church. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
  • DeHart, Paul (2006). The Trial of Witnesses: The Rise and Decline of Postliberal Theology. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4051-3295-4.
  • Gazal, André (2016). "Twentieth-Century Theologies". In Kurian, George Thomas; Lamport, Mark A. (eds.). Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States. Vol. 5. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 487–488. ISBN 978-1-4422-4432-0.
  • Griffiths, Paul J. (1991). An Apology for Apologetics: A Study in the Logic of Interreligious Dialogue. Maryknoll, New York: Orbis Books. ISBN 978-0-88344-762-8.
  • Hauerwas, Stanley (2002). With the Grain of the Universe: The Church's Witness and Natural Theology. London: SCM Press. ISBN 978-0-334-02864-2.
  • Lindbeck, George (1984). The Nature of Doctrine: Religion and Theology in a Postliberal Age. ISBN 978-0-664-24618-1.
  • Michener, Ronald T. (2013). Postliberal Theology: A Guide for the Perplexed. London: T&T Clark. ISBN 978-0-567-24541-0.
  • Milbank, John (1990). Theology and Social Theory: Beyond Secular Reason. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-14573-8.
  • Pecknold, C. C. (2005). Transforming Postliberal Theology: George Lindbeck, Pragmatism and Scripture. London: T&T Clark. ISBN 978-0-567-03034-4.
  • Placher, William C. (1997). "Postliberal Theology". In Ford, David F. (ed.). The Modern Theologians: An Introduction to Christian Theology in the Twentieth Century. Malden, Massachusetts.
  • Vanhoozer, Kevin J. (2005). The Drama of Doctrine: A Canonical-Linguistic Approach To Christian Theology. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-664-22327-4.

Further reading

  • ______ “Thomas, Thomisms, and Truth.” The Thomist 56, no. 3 (1992): 499–524.

postliberal, theology, often, called, narrative, theology, christian, theological, movement, that, focuses, narrative, presentation, christian, faith, regulative, development, coherent, systematic, theology, thus, christianity, overarching, story, with, embedd. Postliberal theology often called narrative theology is a Christian theological movement that focuses on a narrative presentation of the Christian faith as regulative for the development of a coherent systematic theology Thus Christianity is an overarching story with its own embedded culture grammar and practices which can be understood only with reference to Christianity s own internal logic 1 The movement became popular in the late twentieth century primarily among scholars associated with Yale Divinity School 2 Supporters challenge assumptions of the Enlightenment and modernity such as foundationalism and the belief in universal rationality 3 by speaking in terms of Ludwig Wittgenstein s concept of language games 4 They argue that the biblical narrative challenges the dominant presuppositions of liberalism and liberal Christianity including its emphasis on the autonomous individual 5 Contents 1 History 2 Theological platform 3 Criticisms 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Footnotes 6 2 Bibliography 7 Further readingHistory EditPostliberal theology arose amongst scholars who either taught or studied at Yale Divinity School such as George Lindbeck Hans Wilhelm Frei and alumnus Stanley Hauerwas It is sometimes referred to as the Yale school or narrative theology 6 The term postliberal theology came about shortly after the publication of Linbeck s The Nature of Doctrine Religion and Theology in a Postliberal Age 1984 7 The movement is theologically influenced by Karl Barth Thomas Aquinas and to some extent the nouvelle theologie of French Catholics such as Henri de Lubac The clear philosophical influence however was Ludwig Wittgenstein s philosophy of language the moral philosophy of Alasdair MacIntyre and the sociological insights of Clifford Geertz and Peter Berger on the nature of communities Philosophers of science such as Thomas Kuhn and literary theorists such as Erich Auerbach also influenced the new approach 8 This movement has influenced other movements such as radical orthodoxy scriptural reasoning paleo orthodoxy the emerging church movement and postliberal expressions of evangelical Protestantism and Roman Catholicism Its ecumenical spirit originates from Lindbeck s work which was partly animated by his involvement as a Lutheran observer at the Second Vatican Council 8 Theological platform EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Partly a reaction to the trends of theological liberalism postliberal theology roots rationality not in the certainty of the individual thinking subject cogito ergo sum I think therefore I am but in the language and culture of a living tradition of communal life The postliberals argue that the Christian faith be equated with neither the religious feelings of romanticism nor the propositions of a rationalist or fundamentalist approach to religion and theology Rather the Christian faith is understood as a culture and a language in which doctrines are likened to a depth grammar for the first order language and culture practices skills habits of the church that is historically shaped by the continuous regulated reading of the scriptural narrative over time Thus in addition to a critique of theological liberalism and an emphasis upon the Bible there is also a stress upon tradition and upon the language culture and intelligibility intrinsic to the Christian community As a result postliberal theologies are often oriented around the scriptural narrative as a script to be performed understand orthodox dogmas esp the creeds as depth grammars for Christian life and see such scriptural and traditional grammars as a resource for both Christian self critique and culture critique The early postliberals followed Karl Barth s view that the best apologetic is a good systematic and as such believed that Christians should not engage in systematic apologetics Postliberal theologians will make ad hoc connections with the philosophy or art or miscellaneous experience of the cultures around them but they do not believe that any non Christian framework philosophical or cultural sets the context in which Christian claims must be defended However later postliberals have qualified this aversion and have seriously tempered its initial concerns over both apologetics and metaphysics a In this way postliberal theologies have largely replicated earlier 20th century debates surrounding the notion of the analogy of being cf Hans Urs von Balthasar The Theology of Karl Barth Unlike the pluralistic liberal trend preceding it postliberal theology also tends to stress the dissimilarities between religious worldviews 8 and will often strike out against dominant cultural trends Scriptural interpretation remains fundamental for postliberal theology There are at least four key exegetical differences between liberal and postliberal theology First liberal interpretation of Scripture is done with a preoccupation with the historical context whereas postliberal interpretation is an act of imagination interpreting the text with the needs of the reading sub community in the forefront Liberal theology deals with aiming to understand the text as it would have applied to the past Using a non foundationalist approach postliberal interpretation aims to interpret the text as it should be applied now and in the future Second liberal theologians stress dependence on unbiased reason to ensure finding the objective meaning of the text Postliberal theologians however recognize the impossibility of reading without imposing subjective interpretation of the text by the reader where such a notion of objective reading disintegrates Third we read texts as bodied interpreters fully situated in some body politic That is each and every meaning is to a certain degree relative to the reader and their own set of contexts Finally because reading is always done with a concern for the sub community postliberal interpretation always contains a normative element encouraging an active response Liberal interpretation on the other hand centre around time and situation independent truths that do not necessarily impel the reader to act 9 More typical of postliberal theologies today however is a return to patristic and medieval hermeneutical models for reading scripture theologically uniting historical grammatical and spiritual figurative allegorical senses into a coherent and faithful understanding of Scripture The Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible is one example of postliberal scriptural interpretation at work Ronald T Michener argues that there are five characteristics common amongst expressions of postliberal theology Non foundationalist Intra textual Socially centred Respects plurality and diversity Embraces a generous orthodoxy 10 Criticisms EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Postliberal theology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Critics of postliberalism often have been concerned with its post foundational aspects Similar to the criticism of postmodern philosophical systems critics who wonder how one postliberal theology can be measured up against another to determine which is better more appropriate closer to truth Postliberal theology s divorcing itself from historical necessity and objective consideration is viewed negatively by many conservative Christians who Additionally critics wonder what implications such allegedly relativistic views such as the possibility of religious pluralism might have for Christianity 11 Though influential on a generation of young pastors the movement has had a hard time finding grass roots support within mainline Protestant denominations many of which face vicious liberal conservative pressures and rifts something the movement tends to dismiss as a sign of cultural accommodation Some critics have suggested that because the movement has largely rejected a mediating theology thus rendering it mostly inaccessible to laypeople it is difficult to implement its tenets on the local congregational level so postliberalism remains largely an academic specialty much like preceding movements such as neo orthodoxy Later postliberal theologies have however made mediation a central concern b and grassroots groups like the Ekklesia Project can be seen to cut across the face of such criticisms Debates have been centred on issues of incommensurability sectarianism fideism relativism truth and ontological reference A number of works have sought to resolve these questions to various degrees of satisfaction c and the debates continue across the theological disciplines Furthermore critics who have maintained that the internal coherence model postliberal theologians assume is difficult to square with developments in modern science which would seem to challenge the tenets of traditional orthodox Christianity e g the new physics or evolution yet such criticisms neglect the ways in which the postliberal view of doctrines as depth grammars inscribing the rules of the faith articulated at Nicea and Chalcedon provide dynamic ways of relating the truths of faith to truths of scientific discovery Likewise Bruce Marshall and others have developed postliberal approaches to truth that resemble the moderate realism of the medieval correspondence theory of truth e g Thomas Aquinas See also Edit Christianity portalBiblical theology Postmodern ChristianityNotes Edit For example see Griffiths 1991 and Hauerwas 2002 For example see Milbank 1990 For example see Pecknold 2005 Vanhoozer 2005 and DeHart 2006 References EditFootnotes Edit Dorrien Gary 2001 A Third Way in Theology The Origins of Postliberalism The Christian Century Vol 118 no 20 ISSN 0009 5281 Retrieved 9 March 2018 via Religion Online Gazal 2016 p 487 Olson Roger E 1996 Back to the Bible Almost Christianity Today Vol 40 no 6 ISSN 0009 5753 Retrieved 9 March 2018 Ashford 2007 Willimon William H 1987 Answering Pilate Truth and the Postliberal Church The Christian Century Vol 104 no 3 pp 82 85 ISSN 0009 5281 Retrieved 9 March 2018 via Religion Online Placher William C 1999 Being Postliberal A Response to James Gustafson The Christian Century Vol 116 no 11 pp 390 392 ISSN 0009 5281 Retrieved 9 March 2018 via Religion Online Lindbeck 1984 a b c Placher 1997 Brueggemann 2005 Michener 2013 p 4 Gustafson James M 1999 Just What Is Postliberal Theology The Christian Century Vol 116 no 10 pp 353 355 ISSN 0009 5281 Retrieved 9 March 2018 Bibliography Edit Ashford Bruce R 2007 Wittgenstein s Theologians A Survey of Ludwig Wittgenstein s Impact on Theologians PDF Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 50 2 357 375 ISSN 1745 5251 Retrieved 9 March 2018 Brueggemann Walter 2005 The Re Emergence of Scripture Post Liberalism In Ballard Paul Holmes Stephen R eds The Bible in Pastoral Practice Readings in the Place and Function of Scripture in the Church Grand Rapids Michigan Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Company DeHart Paul 2006 The Trial of Witnesses The Rise and Decline of Postliberal Theology Malden Massachusetts Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 4051 3295 4 Gazal Andre 2016 Twentieth Century Theologies In Kurian George Thomas Lamport Mark A eds Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States Vol 5 Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield pp 487 488 ISBN 978 1 4422 4432 0 Griffiths Paul J 1991 An Apology for Apologetics A Study in the Logic of Interreligious Dialogue Maryknoll New York Orbis Books ISBN 978 0 88344 762 8 Hauerwas Stanley 2002 With the Grain of the Universe The Church s Witness and Natural Theology London SCM Press ISBN 978 0 334 02864 2 Lindbeck George 1984 The Nature of Doctrine Religion and Theology in a Postliberal Age ISBN 978 0 664 24618 1 Michener Ronald T 2013 Postliberal Theology A Guide for the Perplexed London T amp T Clark ISBN 978 0 567 24541 0 Milbank John 1990 Theology and Social Theory Beyond Secular Reason Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 14573 8 Pecknold C C 2005 Transforming Postliberal Theology George Lindbeck Pragmatism and Scripture London T amp T Clark ISBN 978 0 567 03034 4 Placher William C 1997 Postliberal Theology In Ford David F ed The Modern Theologians An Introduction to Christian Theology in the Twentieth Century Malden Massachusetts Vanhoozer Kevin J 2005 The Drama of Doctrine A Canonical Linguistic Approach To Christian Theology Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22327 4 Further reading EditAlter Robert 1981 The Art of Biblical Narrative New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 00427 0 Barron Robert 2007 The Priority of Christ Towards a Postliberal Catholicism Campbell Charles L 1997 Preaching Jesus New Directions for Homiletics in Hans Frei s Postliberal Theology Donahue John R 1990 The Gospel in Parable Metaphor Narrative and Theology in the Synoptic Gospels Philadelphia Fortress Press ISBN 978 0 8006 2480 4 Frei Hans 1980 The Eclipse of Biblical Narrative A Study in Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Hermeneutics ISBN 978 0 300 02602 3 Goldberg Michael 1982 Theology and Narrative A Critical Introduction Philadelphia Trinity Press International ISBN 978 1 56338 010 5 Green Joel B Pasquarello Michael III eds 2003 Narrative Reading Narrative Preaching Grand Rapids Michigan Baker Academic ISBN 978 0 8010 2721 5 Harink Douglas 2003 Paul Among the Postliberals ISBN 978 1 58743 041 1 Hauerwas Stanley 1981 A Community of Character ISBN 978 0 268 00735 5 1993 Unleashing the Scripture Freeing the Bible from Captivity to America ISBN 978 0 687 31678 6 Hauerwas Stanley Jones L Gregory eds 1989 Why Narrative Readings in Narrative Theology ISBN 978 1 57910 065 0 Hauerwas Stanley Willimon Willimon H 1989 Resident Aliens Life in the Christian Colony Nashville Tennessee Abingdon Press ISBN 978 0 687 36159 5 Lancaster Sarah Heaner 2002 Women and the Authority of Scripture A Narrative Approach Harrisburg Pennsylvania Trinity Press International ISBN 978 1 56338 356 4 Lodahl Michael 1994 The Story of God Wesleyan Theology and Biblical Narrative ISBN 978 0 8341 1479 1 Mangina Joseph 2004 Karl Barth Theologian of Christian Witness Marshall Bruce D Aquinas as Postliberal Theologian The Thomist 53 no 3 1989 353 402 Thomas Thomisms and Truth The Thomist 56 no 3 1992 499 524 Trinity and Truth Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2000 Nineham Dennis 1976 The Use and Abuse of the Bible A Study of the Bible in an Age of Rapid Cultural Change ISBN 978 0 333 10489 7 Ochs Peter 2011 Another Reformation Postliberal Christianity and the Jews ISBN 978 0 8010 3940 9 Phillips Timothy R Okholm Dennis L eds 1996 The Nature of Confession Evangelicals and Postliberals in Conversation Placher William C 1994 Narratives of a Vulnerable God Christ Theology and Scripture ISBN 978 0 664 25534 3 1996 The Domestication of Transcendence How Modern Thinking About God Went Wrong ISBN 978 0 664 25635 7 2007 The Triune God An Essay in Postliberal Theology ISBN 978 0 664 23060 9 Stroup George 1997 The Promise of Narrative Theology Recovering the Gospel in the Church ISBN 978 1 57910 053 7 Thiemann Ronald F 1985 Revelation and Theology The Gospel as Narrated Promise ISBN 978 1 59752 358 5 Wright John W ed 2012 Postliberal Theology and the Church Catholic Conversations with George Lindbeck David Burrell Stanley Hauerwas ISBN 978 0 8010 3982 9 Yoder John Howard 1972 The Politics of Jesus ISBN 978 0 8028 0734 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Postliberal theology amp oldid 1127854901, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.