A Free Corrector: Colin Gunton and the Legacy of Augustine
A Free Corrector evaluates Colin Gunton’s controversial treatment of Augustine’s theological legacy.

While others have critiqued Gunton’s negative reading of Augustine, McNall goes further in addressing Gunton’s argument regarding Augustine’s “afterlife” (that is, the appropriation of Augustine by crucial figures from the medieval era to the dawn of modern thought).

In the end, A Free Corrector argues that while Gunton was indeed unfair to Augustine, not all his claims about Augustine’s legacy may be so easily dismissed. While Gunton was wrong to claim that Augustine’s doctrine of the Trinity was decidedly monistic, it remains viable to argue that Augustine’s view of the mind as the imago Trinitatis would contribute to problems over time. Likewise, on the doctrine of creation, Gunton was overzealous in his criticisms even while he found more support for his claim that Augustine’s “inward turn” would encourage a problematic preference for mind over matter. The result of this study is thus a plea for balance: while Gunton was far too “free” in his correction of Augustine, it is also true that aspects of his Augustinian narrative remain viable.
1120820998
A Free Corrector: Colin Gunton and the Legacy of Augustine
A Free Corrector evaluates Colin Gunton’s controversial treatment of Augustine’s theological legacy.

While others have critiqued Gunton’s negative reading of Augustine, McNall goes further in addressing Gunton’s argument regarding Augustine’s “afterlife” (that is, the appropriation of Augustine by crucial figures from the medieval era to the dawn of modern thought).

In the end, A Free Corrector argues that while Gunton was indeed unfair to Augustine, not all his claims about Augustine’s legacy may be so easily dismissed. While Gunton was wrong to claim that Augustine’s doctrine of the Trinity was decidedly monistic, it remains viable to argue that Augustine’s view of the mind as the imago Trinitatis would contribute to problems over time. Likewise, on the doctrine of creation, Gunton was overzealous in his criticisms even while he found more support for his claim that Augustine’s “inward turn” would encourage a problematic preference for mind over matter. The result of this study is thus a plea for balance: while Gunton was far too “free” in his correction of Augustine, it is also true that aspects of his Augustinian narrative remain viable.
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A Free Corrector: Colin Gunton and the Legacy of Augustine

A Free Corrector: Colin Gunton and the Legacy of Augustine

by Joshua McNall
A Free Corrector: Colin Gunton and the Legacy of Augustine

A Free Corrector: Colin Gunton and the Legacy of Augustine

by Joshua McNall

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Overview

A Free Corrector evaluates Colin Gunton’s controversial treatment of Augustine’s theological legacy.

While others have critiqued Gunton’s negative reading of Augustine, McNall goes further in addressing Gunton’s argument regarding Augustine’s “afterlife” (that is, the appropriation of Augustine by crucial figures from the medieval era to the dawn of modern thought).

In the end, A Free Corrector argues that while Gunton was indeed unfair to Augustine, not all his claims about Augustine’s legacy may be so easily dismissed. While Gunton was wrong to claim that Augustine’s doctrine of the Trinity was decidedly monistic, it remains viable to argue that Augustine’s view of the mind as the imago Trinitatis would contribute to problems over time. Likewise, on the doctrine of creation, Gunton was overzealous in his criticisms even while he found more support for his claim that Augustine’s “inward turn” would encourage a problematic preference for mind over matter. The result of this study is thus a plea for balance: while Gunton was far too “free” in his correction of Augustine, it is also true that aspects of his Augustinian narrative remain viable.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781451496642
Publisher: Augsburg Fortress, Publishers
Publication date: 05/01/2015
Series: Emerging Scholars
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 329
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Joshua McNall is assistant professor in the School of Ministry and Christian Thought at Oklahoma Wesleyan University in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. This volume represents an expanded version of his doctoral thesis, done under Thomas A. Noble at the University of Manchester, UK.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements ix

Abbreviations xi

1 A Free Corrector: Colin Gunton on the Trinity, Creation, and the Legacy of Augustine 1

2 Critiques Of Colin Gunton: Challenges on the Trinity, Creation, and the Legacy of Augustine 29

3 Gunton and Augustine's God: The Question of Monistic Imbalance in Augustine's Trinitarianism 53

4 Gunton and Augustine's World: The Question of Dualism in Augustine's Doctrine of Creation 93

5 Gunton and Augustine's Medieval Afterlife (Part 133 One) 133

6 Gunton and Augustine's Medieval Afterlife (Part 165 Two) 165

7 Gunton and Augustine's Reformation Afterlife 189

8 Gunton and Augustine's Modern Afterlife 215

9 Gunton and the Triune Corrective (Part One): Irenaeus as an "Antidote" to Certain Augustinian Imbalances 233

10 Gunton and the Triune Corrective (Part Two): The Cappadocian Fathers as the "Antidote" to Certain Augustinian Imbalances 259

11 On "Fruit" and Free Correctors: Conclusions on Colin Gunton and the Legacy of Augustine 281

Bibliography 291

Index 325

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