lunamoth
Episcopalian
I've been doing some pretty basic reading in theology lately and just came across the idea of Postliberal Christianity. I found it very interesting because it explains at least in part why I 'believe' the way I do. So, with some liberal (no pun intended) cutting out of sentences I'd like to share the basic concept with you all here, throw it against the wall and see what sticks.
start excerpt****
From Christian Theology an Introduction, by Alister McGrath:
One of the most significant developments in theology since about 1980 has been a growing skepticism over the plausibility of a liberal worldview. The emergence of postliberalism is widely regarded as one of the most important aspects of western theology since 1980. (OK, so it's not the best-written text I've ever read...)
...
Its central foundations are narrative approaches to theology, such as those developed by Hans Frei, and the schools of social interpretation which stress the importance of culture and language in the generation and interpretation of experience and thought.
Building upon the work of philosophers such as Alasdair MacIntyre, postliberalism rejects both the traditional Enlightenment appeal to a "universal rationality" and the liberal assumption of an immediate religious experience common to all humanity. Arguing that all thought and experience is historically and socially mediated, postliberalism bases its theological program upon a reutrn to religious traditions, whose values are inwardly appropriated. Postliberalism is thus anti-foundational (in that it rejects the notion of a universal foundation of knowledge), communitarian (in that it appeals to the values, experiences and language of a community, rather tha prioritizing the individual), and historicist (in that it insists upon the importance of traditions and their associated historical communities in the shaping of experience and thought).
...
In this respect (the emphasis on the relation between narrative, community, and the moral life), postliberalism reintroduced a strong emphasis on the particularity of the Christian faith, in reaction against the strongly homogenizing tendencies of liberalism, in its abortive attempt (called such because liberalism is deemed to be on the wane now) to make the theory (that all religions are saying the same thing) and observation (that all religions are different) coincide.
...
Such ideas can be seen in an ealier work of importance to the emergence of postliberalism - Paul Holmer's Grammar of Faith (1978). For Holmer, Christianity possesses a central grammar which regulates the structure and shape of Christian "language games." This language is not invented or imposed by theology; it is already inherent within the biblical paradigms upon which theology is ultimately dependent. The taks of theology is thus to discern these intrabiblical rules (such as the manner in which God is worshippped and spoken about), not to impose extrabiblical rules. For Holmer, one of liberalism's most fundamental flaws was it attempts to "reinterpret" or "restate" biblical concepts, which inevitably degenerated into the harmonization of Scripture with the spirit of the age. "Continuous redoing of the Scripture to fit the age is only a sophisticated and probably invisible bondage to the age rather than the desire to win the age for God." ...
****end excerpt
The text goes on to also give some criticisms of postliberalism which I will share in a future post. However, before I do I'd be interested to hear what you all have to say about this idea.
lunamoth
start excerpt****
From Christian Theology an Introduction, by Alister McGrath:
One of the most significant developments in theology since about 1980 has been a growing skepticism over the plausibility of a liberal worldview. The emergence of postliberalism is widely regarded as one of the most important aspects of western theology since 1980. (OK, so it's not the best-written text I've ever read...)
...
Its central foundations are narrative approaches to theology, such as those developed by Hans Frei, and the schools of social interpretation which stress the importance of culture and language in the generation and interpretation of experience and thought.
Building upon the work of philosophers such as Alasdair MacIntyre, postliberalism rejects both the traditional Enlightenment appeal to a "universal rationality" and the liberal assumption of an immediate religious experience common to all humanity. Arguing that all thought and experience is historically and socially mediated, postliberalism bases its theological program upon a reutrn to religious traditions, whose values are inwardly appropriated. Postliberalism is thus anti-foundational (in that it rejects the notion of a universal foundation of knowledge), communitarian (in that it appeals to the values, experiences and language of a community, rather tha prioritizing the individual), and historicist (in that it insists upon the importance of traditions and their associated historical communities in the shaping of experience and thought).
...
In this respect (the emphasis on the relation between narrative, community, and the moral life), postliberalism reintroduced a strong emphasis on the particularity of the Christian faith, in reaction against the strongly homogenizing tendencies of liberalism, in its abortive attempt (called such because liberalism is deemed to be on the wane now) to make the theory (that all religions are saying the same thing) and observation (that all religions are different) coincide.
...
Such ideas can be seen in an ealier work of importance to the emergence of postliberalism - Paul Holmer's Grammar of Faith (1978). For Holmer, Christianity possesses a central grammar which regulates the structure and shape of Christian "language games." This language is not invented or imposed by theology; it is already inherent within the biblical paradigms upon which theology is ultimately dependent. The taks of theology is thus to discern these intrabiblical rules (such as the manner in which God is worshippped and spoken about), not to impose extrabiblical rules. For Holmer, one of liberalism's most fundamental flaws was it attempts to "reinterpret" or "restate" biblical concepts, which inevitably degenerated into the harmonization of Scripture with the spirit of the age. "Continuous redoing of the Scripture to fit the age is only a sophisticated and probably invisible bondage to the age rather than the desire to win the age for God." ...
****end excerpt
The text goes on to also give some criticisms of postliberalism which I will share in a future post. However, before I do I'd be interested to hear what you all have to say about this idea.
lunamoth