Going Public with the Means of Grace: A Homiletical Theology of Promise for Word and Sacrament in a Post-secular age

This article articulates a revisionist homiletical theology of Word and Sacrament for a disestablished church in a disenchanted, post-secular world. Its understanding of the post-secular context, an age of religious resurgence nonetheless impacted by the secular, is grounded in Charles Taylor's...

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书目详细资料
主要作者: Jacobsen, David Schnasa 1961- (Author)
格式: 电子 文件
语言:English
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出版: Sage Publ. [2018]
In: Theology today
Year: 2018, 卷: 75, 发布: 3, Pages: 371-382
IxTheo Classification:CH Christianity and Society
KDD Protestant Church
RC Liturgy
RE Homiletics
Further subjects:B Theology
B Charles Taylor
B Promise
B Richard Kearney
B Preaching
B Word and sacrament
B Post-secularism
在线阅读: Volltext (Resolving-System)
实物特征
总结:This article articulates a revisionist homiletical theology of Word and Sacrament for a disestablished church in a disenchanted, post-secular world. Its understanding of the post-secular context, an age of religious resurgence nonetheless impacted by the secular, is grounded in Charles Taylor's analysis of the Reformation as an engine of cultural change even today: disenchantment, shared vocation, and the "affirmation of the ordinary." In this context, it seeks to revise Protestant notions of the gospel as promise in the direction of Richard Kearney's onto-eschatological vision in The God Who May Be. Such a notion of promise, connected to Kearney's "traversing presence" yet embracing its possibilizing force, pushes against attempts to re-trench and reenchant, as in some postliberal and radical orthodox theologies, in favor of a more apologetic public theology of Word and Sacrament.
ISSN:2044-2556
Contains:Enthalten in: Theology today
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1177/0040573618791739