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Colin Gunton And The Failure Of Augustine Bradley G Green

  • SKU: BELL-59406592
Colin Gunton And The Failure Of Augustine Bradley G Green
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

4.8

104 reviews

Colin Gunton And The Failure Of Augustine Bradley G Green instant download after payment.

Publisher: Lightning Source (Tier 4)
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 1.19 MB
Author: Bradley G. Green;
ISBN: 9781621890911, 1621890910
Language: English
Year: 2014

Product desciption

Colin Gunton And The Failure Of Augustine Bradley G Green by Bradley G. Green; 9781621890911, 1621890910 instant download after payment.

Review

"The late Colin Gunton was an ardent and influential critic of Augustine's Trinitarian theology. His work was influential on many in the English speaking theological community. Brad Green's book offers the most sustained critique currently available of Gunton's work and should be read by anyone who has been swayed by Gunton's presentation. But more than this, Green's work also makes available a very different Augustine. Building on the work of a growing body of scholarship, Green reveals to the theological community a vision of Augustine that will help us to think again about this most important of the Church Fathers in the west."
--Lewis Ayers
Candler School of Theology

"Brad Green offers a persuasive reading of Augustine that corrects misapprehensions found, not just in the work of Colin Gunton, but much more widely across contemporary theology. He also shows us how Augustine, rightly understood, can be recovered as a positive resource for contemporary theology. The book is not merely corrective, however: the reader will discover a perceptive and sympathetic reading of Gunton's own thought that gives us insight into a significant contemporary figure. This book will open up ancient and modern theology, and how they should be related. These are important matters, and I hope it will be widely read."
--Stephen Holmes
University of St. Andrews

"Over the past few decades, Trinitarian theology has risen from the post-Enlightenment deluge in which it seemed to have sunk, and few have played as crucial a role in that development as the late Colin Gunton. Theologians and church leaders alike found in Gunton's work not only a rich theology of God but also the framework for a Trinitarian ontology, aesthetics, science, and cultural analysis--a Trinitarian theology useful in ways that Kant would never have dreamed. At the foundation of Gunton's work was the claim that Augustine early on steered Western theology into a reef, leaving contemporary theologians to gather the wreckage and rebuild. Through an appreciative yet critical examination of Gunton's project, and an equally cogent treatment of Augustine, Brad Green has gently corrected Gunton's reading of Augustine, showing that the Bishop of Hippo left Western theology far more seaworthy than Gunton believed. In the process, Green strengthens Gunton's case against modernity by providing some Augustinian equipment. This is theology of a high caliber--judicious, clear, convincing, and, above all, serviceable to the church as it navigates the roiling seas of modernity and postmodernity."
--Peter Leithart
New Saint Andrews College

"Brad Green set out to vindicate Colin Gunton's revolutionary critique of Augustine-namely, that he is a proto-Unitarian who imports the ancient Greek emphasis on the One into his own doctrine of the Trinity. Instead Green came to see, in ways that others have not, that Gunton is quite wrongheaded in tracing our modern and post-modern ills to an alleged monergism in Augustine. Far from failing to emphasize the communal character of the Trinity--allegedly denying the insights of the Cappadocians in this matter--Augustine has a robust doctrine of the three Persons as dwelling in utterly self-offering community. In his carefully argued and lucidly written dissertation, Green shows that Augustine's Trinitarian communalism--especially as it engaged ancient pagan culture--offers the real antidote to the perilous individualism that is the chief legacy of the Enlightenment."
--Ralph Wood
Baylor University --Wipf and Stock Publishers

About the Author

Bradley G. Green is Associate Professor of Christian Thought and Tradition at Union University (Jackson, Tennessee). He is the author (editor and contributor) of Shapers of Christian Orthodoxy: Engaging with Early and Medieval Theologians (2010) and the author of The Gospel and the Mind: Recovering and Shaping the Intellectual Life (2010).


ISBN : 9781621890911

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