Christopher Ben Simpson tells the story of modern Christian theology against the backdrop of the history of modernity itself. The book tells the many ways that theology became modern while seeing how modernity arose in no small part from theology. These intertwined stories progress through four parts.In Part I, Emerging Modernity, Simpson goes from the beginnings of modernity in the late Middle Ages through the Protestant Reformation and Renaissance Humanism to the creative tension between Enlightenments and Awakenings of the eighteenth-century. Part II, The Long Nineteenth-Century, presents the great movements and figures arising out of these creative tension - from Romanticism and Schleiermacher to Ritschlianism and Vatican I. Part III, Twentieth-Century Crisis and Modernity, proceeds through the revolutionary theologies of period of the World Wars such as that of Karl Barth or novuelle theologie; this part includes a thorough section on modern Eastern Orthodox theology. Finally, Part IV, The Late Modern Supernova, lays out the diverse panoply of recent theologies - from the various liberation theologies to the revisionist, the secular, the postliberal, and the postsecular.Designed for classroom use, this volume includes the following features:- boxes/chart/diagrams/visual organizations of the information presented included throughout: e.g. lists of key points, visual organizations of systematic ideas in a given thinker, lists of significant works, lists of significant dates, brief outlines of the basic structure of some major theological works- both a one-page chapter title table of the contents and an expanded(multipage) table of contents- chapter at-a-glance overview/outline at the beginning of each chapter- specific references to secondary works and key primary works in Enqlish translation at the end of chapters
Christopher Ben Simpson is Professor of Philosophical Theology at Lincoln Christian University, USA. Simpson is the author of Religion, Metaphysics and Postmodern (2009), The Truth is the Way: Kierkegaard's Theologia Viatorum (2010), Deleuze and Theology (2012), and Merleau-Ponty and Theology (2014).
AcknowledgmentsList of Images and FiguresIntroductionPART I: EMERGING MODERNITYChapter 1: The Middle Ages and the Lost WorldChapter 2: Reformation and Humanism: 1400-1650Chapter 3: Enlightenments and Awakenings: 1650-1800Chapter 4: Kant PART II: THE LONG NINETEENTH CENTURYChapter 5: Romanticism: 1800-1850Chapter 6: SchleiermacherChapter 7: Hegel and HegeliansChapter 8: Coping with the NovaChapter 9: Early-Nineteenth-Century Catholic and Anglo-Catholic TheologyChapter 10: RitschlianismChapter 11: Late-Nineteenth-Century Catholic TheologyPART III: TWENTIETH-CENTURY CRISIS AND MODERNITYChapter 12: Kierkegaard and NietzscheChapter 13: BarthChapter 14: Bultmann and TillichChapter 15: Early-Twentieth-Century Catholic TheologyChapter 16: Twentieth-Century Eastern Orthodox TheologyChapter 17: Conservative Protestants in AmericaPART IV: THE LATE MODERN SUPERNOVAChapter 18: Later Twentieth-Century Catholic TheologyChapter 19: Liberation TheologiesChapter 20: Revisionist and Secular TheologiesChapter 21: Postliberal and Postsecular TheologiesIndex
From Hegel to Barth and Bultmann to revisionist and secular theologies, Simpson has supplied the clearest textbook yet in this field and has brought the debates up to date and situated them within a wider global and postcolonial framework than is the case with many of the other books in this field. I don't just heartily recommend it - this book will be the primary point of reference for my lectures and seminar discussions in the years ahead.