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Lord, Giver of Life

Toward a Pneumatological Complement to George Lindbeck's Theory of Doctrine

Lord, Giver of Life

Toward a Pneumatological Complement to George Lindbeck's Theory of Doctrine

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Hardback

£75.00

Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
ISBN: 9780889205017
Number of Pages: 180
Published: 30/12/2006
Width: 15.7 cm
Height: 23.5 cm

George Lindbeck once characterized postliberalism, which received its initial structure from his book The Nature of Doctrine, as an attempt to recover pre-modern scriptural interpretation in contemporary form. In Lord, Giver of Life: Toward a Pneumatological Complement to George Lindbeck's Theory of Doctrine, Jane Barter Moulaison explores the success of that effort through a close examination of Lindbeck's own theological contributions. Taking seriously the ecumenical promises of Lindbeck's writing (he was instrumental in advancing Lutheran and Roman Catholic dialogue throughout the 1960s, '70s, and '80s), this book brings Lindbeck's famous cultural-linguistic model of religion into dialogue with Christianity's theological forbearers: specifically, the Eastern progenitors of orthodox confession.

This constellation of theological voices - Lindbeck, his supporters and detractors, along with patristic theologians - is meant not only to test the viability of a religious model but, more importantly, to advance Lindbeck's project in ways that have not yet been pursued. Among the critical questions engaged are: to what degree can the excesses of modern theology be overcome by a return to premodern sources? What are the implications of a constructive pneumatology to the cultural-linguistic model? Does this complement address the critiques of postliberalism, particularly those that consider the role of human agency, rationality, and autonomy?

While Lindbeck recovers significant and forgotten elements of pre-modern biblical interpretation, the very formalism of his project sometimes obscures the theological underpinnings of premodern insights and practices. Through specific attention to Eastern Trinitarian theologies of the fourth century, this book exposes a rather persistent oversight within Lindbeck's recovery: namely, that alongside the regulative function of canon and doctrine, early biblical interpretation recognizes the role of the Holy Spirit in the appropriation of scripture, in the mission of the church, and in the defence of the gospel within the context of an unbelieving world. This book attends to these insights from the early churchs doctrine of the Holy Spirit in appreciative service to the cultural-linguistic model of religion.

  • Lord and Giver of Life: Toward a Pneumatological Complement to George Lindbeck's Theory of Doctrine by Jane Barter Moulaison
  • Acknowledgments
  • I
  • The Spirit Who Saves: Pneumatological Efficacy as the Fourth Regulative Principle
  • Introduction
  • Three Regulative Principles—and a Fourth
  • Development of an Argument
  • Methods and Sources
  • Conclusion
  • II
  • The Spirit of Language: Pneumatology and Theological Discourse
  • Introduction
  • The Picture of Theological Language That Holds Us Captive
  • Overcoming Modern Epistemologies: A Theological Rationale
  • How Are Doctrines Justified?
  • Conclusion
  • III
  • The Spirit of Truth: Pneumatology and the Apologetical Task
  • Introduction
  • Assessing Religious Truth
  • Assessing Lindbeck's Account of the Holy Spirit
  • McGrath's Critique of Lindbeck
  • Ad Hoc Apologetics
  • A Soteriological Epistemology
  • Conclusion
  • IV
  • The Spirit's Address: Toward a Pneumatological Intratextual Theology
  • Introduction
  • Intratextual Theology and the Gospel's ""Untranslatability""
  • Intentionality
  • Apophaticism and Pneumatology
  • Conclusion
  • V
  • Life in the Spirit: The Church's Practices and Mission
  • Introduction
  • George Lindbeck's People-of-God Ecclesiology
  • A Pneumatological Corrective? Reinhard Hütter's Proposal
  • The Holy Spirit and the Church's Mission: A Patristic Alternative
  • Conclusion
  • VI
  • Staying with Us: The Spirit Between Culture and Kingdom, Language and Word
  • Aspects of a Conversation
  • More Than Two Men and a Bird: A Pneumatological Complement to the Cultural-Linguistic Model
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Index

    Jane Barter Moulaison

    Jane Barter Moulaison is an associate professor of theology and church history at the University of Winnipeg and a priest in the Diocese of Rupert's Land. She is the author of Lord, Giver of Life (WLU Press, 2006) and Thinking Christ: Christology and Critics.