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Theology and the End of Doctrine

Christine Helmer

  • 8/21/2014
  • 0664239293
  • 978-0-664-23929-9
  • Paperback
  • 7-10 days processing

Product Details

  • Paperback
  • 248
  • 6 x 9
  • 10.00 oz

Reviews

"The title is deliberately ambiguous: the true 'end' (purpose) of doctrine is to point beyond itself to the relation of the living God to human beings in this world. Where this 'end' is lost to view, we are threatened with the 'end' (demise) of doctrine. Christine Helmer wants to reinvigorate doctrine. To accomplish this goal, she takes us on a historical journey through twentieth-century theology: from the Ritschlian reaction against mysticism and metaphysics and Brunner's critique of Schleiermacher through Barth's theology of the Word to the creation of an epistemic model by the so-called Yale School in which doctrine has lost its referential status altogether and thus its connection to divine and historical reality. Helmer's constructive solution proceeds through a recovery of Schleiermacher's epistemology (exploding a few myths about the great Berliner along the way!) in order to advance an understanding of doctrine as the expression of a socially conceived interaction with the 'real.' What emerges from this fine study is a theological epistemology that expands and deepens Barth's concept of the Word in important ways and an understanding of doctrine that repairs the damage done to its reputation in recent decades."
—Bruce L. McCormack, Charles Hodge Professor of Systematic Theology, Princeton Theological Seminary

"Recent discussion on doctrine has often been critical of the theological insights of modernity. Christine Helmer undertakes a careful revision of this discussion, emphasizing the need to take history and religious studies seriously. She demonstrates that this emphasis does not downplay the language and reality of theological doctrine but gives them a new relevance."
—Risto Saarinen, Professor of Ecumenics, University of Helsinki

"Succinct and elegantly written, this book is an unflinching engagement with our contemporary suspicion that doctrine (or theology itself) has come to an end. Drawing on some of the most prominent figures in the Reformed tradition, Helmer sketches a compelling vision of a new end for doctrine—one that is designed to resonate across academy, culture, and church. That she manages to do this in conversation with theology, religious studies, and philosophy (including the neglected neo-Kantian movement in Germany) without ever losing the forest for the trees makes her book an excellent candidate for cross-disciplinary discussion."
—Andrew Chignell, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Susan Linn Sage School of Philosophy, Cornell University

"Helmer's book is a groundbreaking revitalization of doctrine for Christian theology and faith but also for the academy. It critiques two prominent approaches: authoritarian views of doctrine that deny its constructed character and the reductionist tendencies of religious studies where 'theology' and doctrine are viewed as anti-intellectual. The crucial connection of doctrine to transcendence through human witness, Helmer argues, requires recognition of doctrine's socially constructed character and the necessity of change. Reappropriating the contributions of Martin Luther and Friedrich Schleiermacher in enormously enlightening ways, she even shows how the work of Karl Barth supports her case for combining social constructionism and the transcendent."
—Mary McClintock Fulkerson, Professor of Theology, Duke Divinity School

"Theology and the End of Doctrine is an important book, long in gestation. Only now, at some distance from the twentieth century, can we see new ways of narrating the story of liberal theology. Helmer's 'end' of doctrine is only the ending of a chapter, not the story itself. Helmer challenges Lindbeck's reading of Schleiermacher as a theologian for whom religious experience displaces the normativity of biblical language and doctrine. The way forward is not merely to analyze the grammar of the language of faith but rather to engage the lived reality that occasions this language. This is a stimulating work in constructive theology that opens up fresh approaches to several problems at once: the dual responsibility of theology to church and academy, the tension between transhistorical truth and historical tradition, and, most of all, the relation of doctrinal language to a theological reality (i.e., God) that, precisely because it is living, invites us to say not only something faithful but also something new."
—Kevi n J. Vanhoozer, Research Professor of Systematic T heology, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School