Apologia: Contextualization, Globalization, and Mission in Theological Education

Apologia: Contextualization, Globalization, and Mission in Theological Education

by Max L. Stackhouse
Apologia: Contextualization, Globalization, and Mission in Theological Education

Apologia: Contextualization, Globalization, and Mission in Theological Education

by Max L. Stackhouse

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Overview

Apologia is about contemporary theological education — its current state and its future. While many current trends in seminaries and departments of theology bring important new insights to the study of religion, says Max Stackhouse, they also erode — sometimes unwittingly — the capacity to speak of God, truth, and justice with warranted confidence. Theology is thereby undermined in all arenas — not only in academia, but in the life of the church and society.

This book not only exposes the frailties of several current ideologies, but also draws noted scholars from five continents and a seminary faculty into an interdisciplinary discussion of the most significant recent literature on theological education. The results are fresh proposals for the reconstructing of theological education on foundations that are contextually alert, globally concerned, and mission- oriented.

Apologia is a ground-breaking work, a book that begins and ends in dialogue, and points toward the ways in which Christian theology will have to redefine itself if it is to actively shape, and not merely reflect, the context in which we live.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780802802859
Publisher: Eerdmans, William B. Publishing Company
Publication date: 01/28/1988
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.58(d)

About the Author

The Stephen Colwell Professor of Christian Ethics atPrinceton Theological Seminary in Princeton, New Jersey.

Table of Contents

Forewordix
Part IA Dialogue
1An Introduction3
A Conversation Reported4
Some Results and Implications7
Early Objections Acknowledged11
2Our Context15
Liberal?16
Modern?17
Neo-orthodox?19
Ecumenical?20
Realist?23
Biblical?26
3Texts and Contexts29
From Text to Context30
The Context as Text33
From Context to Text38
4Affirmations and Translations43
Minimalist Affirmations43
So Long, Sola Scriptura50
Translation Transforms53
A General Pattern?56
Where Are We?61
Part IIWider Discussions
5Consultations and Globalization67
On Community Engagement68
On Global Solidarity73
Toward Globalization77
Unresolved Issues78
6Praxis and Solidarity84
The Advocates of Praxis85
The Roots of Praxis88
Praxis Baptized91
Does Praxis Mean Orthopraxis?95
Is Orthopraxis True and Just?98
Praxis Requires Theoria103
7Poesis and Contextuality106
Models of Contextualization107
On Reading Contexts109
The Science of Cultural Contexts112
Catholicity Forsaken?114
Doctrine as a Cultural-Linguistic System119
8Theoria and Phenomenology123
The Loss of Integrity123
Toward Belief-Full Knowledge127
Dissatisfactions129
Schleiermacher Still?132
Part IIIA Proposal
9Apologia139
What Is Missing?141
Is Religion Really Important?145
Can Theology Judge Religions?148
Warranted Wisdom152
Grounded Scientia156
Cosmopolitan Apologetics159
10Orthodoxy?162
What's at Stake?163
Four Doctrines169
A Review182
11Praxiology?184
The Foundations of Praxis185
Three Marks of Justice202
12Doxology209
In Praise of Reason210
A Humble Confidence214
The Future of the Fields217
Appendix 1A Response to Apologia, with Special Reference to Problems of Text and Context223
Appendix 2A Response to Apologia, with Special Reference to the Seminary as a Faith Community230
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