Theology and the Future: Evangelical Assertions and Explorations
Theology was once 'queen of the sciences', the integrating centre of Christendom's conceptual universe. In our own time the very idea of systematic theology is frequently called into question, derided as an arcane and superstitious pseudo-discipline. Even within the church, it is commonly disregarded in favour of unreflective piety and pragmatism. At the same time, the southward shift in world Christianity's centre of gravity prompts crucial questions about the future form and content of theology. Within this context, Theology and the Future offers a case for the continuing viability of theology, exploring how it might adapt to changing circumstances, and discussing its implications for how we are to imagine and help shape our shared human future.

Beginning with the question of God, this book explores what might be meant by 'the future of God', and what its implications are for Christian theology. Chapters follow on the location of theology (in global Christianity, the church and the academy) and on its sources and method. The second half of the book explores a wide variety of dimensions of the human future that theology might address and illuminate. The essays bring together a mix of specialist theologians and interdisciplinary thinkers to support the assertion that there can be no more critical endeavor to the future than understanding God and all things in relationship to him.
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Theology and the Future: Evangelical Assertions and Explorations
Theology was once 'queen of the sciences', the integrating centre of Christendom's conceptual universe. In our own time the very idea of systematic theology is frequently called into question, derided as an arcane and superstitious pseudo-discipline. Even within the church, it is commonly disregarded in favour of unreflective piety and pragmatism. At the same time, the southward shift in world Christianity's centre of gravity prompts crucial questions about the future form and content of theology. Within this context, Theology and the Future offers a case for the continuing viability of theology, exploring how it might adapt to changing circumstances, and discussing its implications for how we are to imagine and help shape our shared human future.

Beginning with the question of God, this book explores what might be meant by 'the future of God', and what its implications are for Christian theology. Chapters follow on the location of theology (in global Christianity, the church and the academy) and on its sources and method. The second half of the book explores a wide variety of dimensions of the human future that theology might address and illuminate. The essays bring together a mix of specialist theologians and interdisciplinary thinkers to support the assertion that there can be no more critical endeavor to the future than understanding God and all things in relationship to him.
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Theology and the Future: Evangelical Assertions and Explorations

Theology and the Future: Evangelical Assertions and Explorations

Theology and the Future: Evangelical Assertions and Explorations

Theology and the Future: Evangelical Assertions and Explorations

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Overview

Theology was once 'queen of the sciences', the integrating centre of Christendom's conceptual universe. In our own time the very idea of systematic theology is frequently called into question, derided as an arcane and superstitious pseudo-discipline. Even within the church, it is commonly disregarded in favour of unreflective piety and pragmatism. At the same time, the southward shift in world Christianity's centre of gravity prompts crucial questions about the future form and content of theology. Within this context, Theology and the Future offers a case for the continuing viability of theology, exploring how it might adapt to changing circumstances, and discussing its implications for how we are to imagine and help shape our shared human future.

Beginning with the question of God, this book explores what might be meant by 'the future of God', and what its implications are for Christian theology. Chapters follow on the location of theology (in global Christianity, the church and the academy) and on its sources and method. The second half of the book explores a wide variety of dimensions of the human future that theology might address and illuminate. The essays bring together a mix of specialist theologians and interdisciplinary thinkers to support the assertion that there can be no more critical endeavor to the future than understanding God and all things in relationship to him.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780567623935
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 07/31/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 408 KB

About the Author

Trevor Cairney is Director of CASE, Master of New College and Professor of Education within the faculty of Arts and Social Science at the University of New South Wales, Australia. He has written 9 books and over 150 refereed articles and book chapters across the fields of education, early learning, language development and (more recently) public theology.

David Starling lectures in New Testament and Theology at Morling College, Australia. He is the author of Not My People: Gentiles as Exiles in Pauline Hermeneutics (2011) and a number of journal articles and book chapters on biblical exegesis and theological hermeneutics.
Trevor Cairney is an Honorary Professor of Education at the University of Sydney, Head of the Moore Theological College Foundation, and University Life Fellow at the University of New South Wales, Australia. He has written ten books and over 200 refereed articles and book chapters across the fields of education, teaching, pedagogy, early learning and theology.
David Starling lectures in New Testament and Theology at Morling College, Australia. He is the author of Not My People: Gentiles as Exiles in Pauline Hermeneutics (2011) and a number of journal articles and book chapters on biblical exegesis and theological hermeneutics.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The future of theology and the theology of the future – Trevor Cairney&David Starling

Part One – The future of theology

1. 'In your light do we see light': The Self-revealing God and the Future of Theology – Michael Allen

2. Does God Have a Future? Theology and the 'Future' of God – Stephen Long

3. Theology and the Future of Global Christianity – K. K. Yeo

4. Theology and the Future of Asia – Miyon Chung

5. Not a wisdom of this age: Theology and the Future of the Post-Christendom Church – David Starling

6. How I Think I Learned to Think Theologically: The Post-Christendom Church and the Future of Theology – Stanley Hauerwas

7. Attentive Judgment: Theology and the Future of Education – John McDowell

8. 'Grace Builds upon Nature': Philosophy and the Future of Theology – Paul Helm

9. A prophetic proposal: Theology and the future of Method – John McClean

Part Two - Theology and the future

10. Smith's White Teeth and Paul's Galatians: Theology and the Future of Humanity – Michael Jensen

11. Theology and the Future of Creativity – Trevor Hart

12. Conversion, Incarnation, Performance: Theology and the Future of Imagination – Alison Searle

13. Emergent pantheism? Science, complexity and the future of Theology – Kirsten Birkett

14. Green Future: Theology and the Future of the Earth – Byron Smith

15. Envisioning An Alternative Urban World: Theology and the Future of the City – David Smith
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