Life in the Spirit: Trinitarian Grammar and Pneumatic Community in Hegel and Augustine

Life in the Spirit: Trinitarian Grammar and Pneumatic Community in Hegel and Augustine

by Douglas Finn
Life in the Spirit: Trinitarian Grammar and Pneumatic Community in Hegel and Augustine

Life in the Spirit: Trinitarian Grammar and Pneumatic Community in Hegel and Augustine

by Douglas Finn

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Overview

Since the nineteenth century, many philosophical and theological commentators have sought to trace lines of continuity between the Trinitarian thought of Augustine of Hippo (354–430) and G. W. F. Hegel (1770–1831). Many contemporary Christian theologians have also criticized Augustine's Trinitarian theology generally and his doctrine of the Holy Spirit more specifically through this historical lens. At the same time, Hegelian Trinitarian conceptual dynamics have come to exert a strong influence over contemporary Trinitarian theology.

In Life in the Spirit, Douglas Finn seeks to redress several imbalances with respect to Augustine, imbalances that have one of their hermeneutic causes in a Hegelian-influenced theological tradition. Finn argues that common readings of Augustine focus too much on his De Trinitate, books 8–15, betraying a modern—and to some extent Hegelian—prejudice against considering sermons and biblical commentaries serious theological work. This broadening of Augustinian texts allows Finn to critique readings of Augustine that, on the one hand, narrow his Trinitarian theology to the so-called psychological analogy and thus chart him on a path to Descartes and Hegel, or, on the other hand, suggest he sacrifices a theology of the Trinitarian persons on the altar of divine substance. Augustine's Trinitarian theology on Finn's reading is one fully engaged with God's work in history.

With this renewed understanding of Augustine's Trinitarianism, Finn allows Augustine to interrogate Hegel with his concerns rather than only the other way around. In this ambitious study, Finn shows that Hegel's rendition of Christianity systematically obviates whole swaths of Christian prayer and practice. He does this nonpolemically, carefully, and with meticulous attention to the texts of both great thinkers.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780268070625
Publisher: University of Notre Dame Press
Publication date: 12/31/2015
Series: Thresholds in Philosophy and Theology
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 424
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Douglas Finn is assistant professor of theology at Boston College.

Table of Contents

Abbreviations vii

Acknowledgments xi

Introduction 1

Part I Word and Spirit

Chapter 1 The Logic of Christ: Hegel's Christology 21

Chapter 2 The Rhetoric of Christ: Augustine's Christology 52

Part II Pentecost

Chapter 3 Hegel's Language of Spirit and Its Social Realization 97

Chapter 4 Augustine: The Holy Spirit and the Transformation of Language 129

Part III Church

Chapter 5 Hegel's Spiritual Community 175

Chapter 6 Augustine and a Catholic Church with Soul? 238

Conclusion 297

Notes 307

Bibliography 365

Index 389

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