The One, the Three and the ManyThis study offers a theological analysis of, and response to, the modern world, and is at once a theology of culture and of creation. In the first half of the book, Gunton expounds some of the distinctive and often contradictory features of modern culture. It emerges that modern culture, far from being unique in its difficulties, reflects similar inadequacies in ancient thought. The distinctive pathos of modernity is to be found in one unique feature, namely the displacement of God that is a mark of all realms of life. The roots of the problem are sought beyond the Enlightenment, where they are often located, in the combination of platonism and Christian theology which dominated medieval Christian thought. At the heart of the matter is a deficient - because of an inadequately trinitarian - understanding of creation and creation's God. The second half of the book develops a powerful theology of creation where due weight can be given to both universal and particular, both society and the individual. |
Contents
From Heraclitus to Havel The problem of the one and the many in modern life and thought | 11 |
2 Modernity as disengagement | 13 |
3 The one and the many | 16 |
4 The concept of God | 22 |
5 Modernity as the displacement of God | 28 |
6 The pathos of the modern condition | 34 |
7 Conclusion | 37 |
The disappearing other The problem of the particular in modern life and thought | 41 |
The universal and the particular Towards a theology of meaning and truth 1 Foundationalism and rationality | 129 |
2 The one as transcendental | 136 |
3 The open transcendental | 141 |
4 Trinitarian transcendentals | 149 |
Through whom and in whom Towards a theology of relatedness | 155 |
2 Economy | 157 |
3 Perichoresis | 163 |
4 An analogical exploration | 166 |
2 Plato | 46 |
3 The Wests double mind | 51 |
freedom | 61 |
the aesthetic | 66 |
6 A pattern of displacement | 71 |
A plea for the present The problem of relatedness in modern life and thought | 74 |
2 Christianitys false eternity | 80 |
3 Modernitys false temporality | 85 |
4 The displacement of eschatology | 89 |
5 Gnosticism renewed | 94 |
The rootless will The problem of meaning and truth in modern life and thought | 101 |
2 Protagoras today | 106 |
3 The fragmentation of culture | 112 |
4 The origins of the rootless will | 119 |
5 The shape of modernity | 123 |
5 The heart of the problem | 173 |
6 Christological conclusion | 178 |
The Lord who is the Spirit Towards a theology of the particular | 180 |
2 The problem of substantiality | 188 |
3 Of particulars | 196 |
4 The lord and giver of being | 204 |
The triune Lord Towards a theology of the one and the many | 210 |
2 Community | 214 |
3 Sociality | 219 |
4 Sociality in context | 223 |
5 Conclusion | 229 |
232 | |
241 | |
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Common terms and phrases
According action appears approach argued aspects attempt basis becomes beginning believe called chapter characteristic Christ Christian claim conceived concept concern constituted continuity created creation culture derives dimensions direction discussion displacement distinctive divine doctrine dynamic economy edited effect enables eschatology essentially eternity ethics example fact Father freedom give homogeneity human idea important individual intellectual involved kind knowledge light living London mark material matter meaning mind modern moral nature notion objective ontology outcome Oxford particular person philosophy Platonic plurality political positive possibilities practice present Press problem provides quest question rationality reality reason recent relation relationality respect root seen sense shape social society space Spirit substantiality suggested temporal theology theory things thought tradition transcendental trinitarian Trinity true truth underlying understanding understood unity University University Press Western
References to this book
Total Truth: Liberating Christianity from Its Cultural Captivity Nancy Pearcey No preview available - 2005 |
A Moral Ontology for a Theistic Ethic: Gathering the Nations in Love and Justice Frank G. Kirkpatrick No preview available - 2003 |