The ecclesiology of Stanley Hauerwas as a distinctly Christian theology of liberation (1970-2000)

Of all the concepts that informed what is often called the Enlightenment Project, liberation is arguably central. Nevertheless the experience of the past 200 years has raised serious questions about the character of this liberation and its pathology. In particular, the place of Christian theology in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thomson, John Bromilow
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11192/
_version_ 1848791216423960576
author Thomson, John Bromilow
author_facet Thomson, John Bromilow
author_sort Thomson, John Bromilow
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Of all the concepts that informed what is often called the Enlightenment Project, liberation is arguably central. Nevertheless the experience of the past 200 years has raised serious questions about the character of this liberation and its pathology. In particular, the place of Christian theology in sustaining, concepts of freedom appears to have been marginalised in much post- Enlightenment thought, a challenge of particular significance to theologians and ethicists. Stanley Hauerwas represents one response to the manifestation of the Enlightenment Project in the United States, a response which, I believe, can be described as a distinctive theology of liberation chiefly from the Enlightenment legacy. This approach involves the integration of theology and ethics in the practices of a people whose identity is correlative to the particular narrative which they embody as that diachronic and synchronic, international community called Church. It also reflects an ambivalence about metaphysics and idealism and a preference for demonstrative, ecclesially mediated, truthful living. Yet the credibility of Hauerwas' ecclesiology as a genuinely Christian politics of liberation depends upon whether Hauerwas can not only identify the limitations of post-Enlightenment liberalism, but transcend them in a way that demonstrates the truthful character of the Christian narrative he believes to be embodied in this community called church. In order to determine whether Hauerwas' Project is a genuinely Christian theology of liberation from the Enlightenment legacy, we shall need to gauge the architecture of that project in chapter 1. Then, in chapter 2, we shall locate him in the wider post-Enlightenment debate, before doing the same in terms of the theological debate in chapter 3. This will bring us into conversation with his use of narrative and story as heuristic tools to resource the character of this ecclesiology in chapter 4, before our attempt, in chapter 5, to explore whether his ecclesial politics represent a distinctively Christian expression of liberty.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:24:59Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-11192
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:24:59Z
publishDate 2001
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-111922025-02-28T11:11:53Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11192/ The ecclesiology of Stanley Hauerwas as a distinctly Christian theology of liberation (1970-2000) Thomson, John Bromilow Of all the concepts that informed what is often called the Enlightenment Project, liberation is arguably central. Nevertheless the experience of the past 200 years has raised serious questions about the character of this liberation and its pathology. In particular, the place of Christian theology in sustaining, concepts of freedom appears to have been marginalised in much post- Enlightenment thought, a challenge of particular significance to theologians and ethicists. Stanley Hauerwas represents one response to the manifestation of the Enlightenment Project in the United States, a response which, I believe, can be described as a distinctive theology of liberation chiefly from the Enlightenment legacy. This approach involves the integration of theology and ethics in the practices of a people whose identity is correlative to the particular narrative which they embody as that diachronic and synchronic, international community called Church. It also reflects an ambivalence about metaphysics and idealism and a preference for demonstrative, ecclesially mediated, truthful living. Yet the credibility of Hauerwas' ecclesiology as a genuinely Christian politics of liberation depends upon whether Hauerwas can not only identify the limitations of post-Enlightenment liberalism, but transcend them in a way that demonstrates the truthful character of the Christian narrative he believes to be embodied in this community called church. In order to determine whether Hauerwas' Project is a genuinely Christian theology of liberation from the Enlightenment legacy, we shall need to gauge the architecture of that project in chapter 1. Then, in chapter 2, we shall locate him in the wider post-Enlightenment debate, before doing the same in terms of the theological debate in chapter 3. This will bring us into conversation with his use of narrative and story as heuristic tools to resource the character of this ecclesiology in chapter 4, before our attempt, in chapter 5, to explore whether his ecclesial politics represent a distinctively Christian expression of liberty. 2001 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11192/1/364394.pdf Thomson, John Bromilow (2001) The ecclesiology of Stanley Hauerwas as a distinctly Christian theology of liberation (1970-2000). PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Enlightenment Project Philosophy Religion
spellingShingle Enlightenment Project
Philosophy
Religion
Thomson, John Bromilow
The ecclesiology of Stanley Hauerwas as a distinctly Christian theology of liberation (1970-2000)
title The ecclesiology of Stanley Hauerwas as a distinctly Christian theology of liberation (1970-2000)
title_full The ecclesiology of Stanley Hauerwas as a distinctly Christian theology of liberation (1970-2000)
title_fullStr The ecclesiology of Stanley Hauerwas as a distinctly Christian theology of liberation (1970-2000)
title_full_unstemmed The ecclesiology of Stanley Hauerwas as a distinctly Christian theology of liberation (1970-2000)
title_short The ecclesiology of Stanley Hauerwas as a distinctly Christian theology of liberation (1970-2000)
title_sort ecclesiology of stanley hauerwas as a distinctly christian theology of liberation (1970-2000)
topic Enlightenment Project
Philosophy
Religion
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11192/