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John Howard Yoder : radical theologian / edited by J. Denny Weaver ; with Earl Zimmerman, Zachary J. Walton, Gerald J. Mast, Ted Grimsrud, and Glen Harold Stassen ; foreword by Marva J. Dawn ; afterword by Lisa Schirch.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Eugene, Oregon : Cascade Books, [2014]Copyright date: ©2014Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9781630876425
  • 1630876429
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version:: John Howard Yoder.DDC classification:
  • 230/.97092 23
LOC classification:
  • BX8143.Y59 J64 2014eb
Other classification:
  • online - EBSCO
Online resources:
Contents:
List of contributors -- Foreword / Marva J. Dawn -- Preface / J. Denny Weaver -- Introduction / J. Denny Weaver -- Christology: from the root / J. Dennny Weaver -- Sixteenth-century Anabaptist roots / Earl Zimmerman -- Harold S. Bender, Anabaptist vision, and the Goshen school / Zachary J. Walton -- Oscar Cullmann and radical descipleship / Earl Zimmerman -- Deconstructing Karl Barth / Gerald J. Mast -- Jesus to Paul / Ted Grimsrud -- The Free church as body politics / Earl Zimmerman -- Pacifism as a way of knowing / Gerald J. Mast -- A Nonviolent public ethic / Glen Harold Stassen -- Interfaith conversations: Judaism to Islam to Hinduism / J. Denny Weaver and Earl Zimmerman -- A Model in conversation with Black and evangelical theology / J. Denny Weaver and Gerald J. Mast -- Reflections from a chagrined "Yoderian" in face of his sexual violence / Ted Grimsrud -- Sin and failure in Anabaptist theology / Gerald J. Mast -- Conclusion / J. Denny Weaver -- Afterword: to the next generation of Pacifist theologians / Lisa Schirch -- Bibliography -- Index.
Summary: This book argues that for John Howard Yoder both theology (in particular Christology) and ethics are expressions of the meaning of the narrative of Jesus. All such statements are relative to a particular context, which means that theology and ethics are always subject to reaching back to the narrative in order to restate the meaning in new and ever-changing contexts. This methodology is visible in Yoder's Preface to Theology, which has been little used in most treatments of Yoder's thought. Yoder has been characterized as standing on Nicene orthodoxy, criticized for rejecting Nicene orthodoxy, called heterodox, and designated a postmodern thinker to be interpreted in terms of other such thinkers. None of these characterizations adequately locates the basis of his methodology in the narrative of Jesus. Thus John Howard Yoder: Radical Theologian aims to go beyond or to supersede existing treatments with its demonstration that Yoder is a radical theologian in the historical meaning of radical--that is, as one who returns to the root. For Christian faith, this root is Jesus Christ. Parts II and III of the book explore the sources of Yoder's approach, and its application in several contemporary contexts.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number URL Status Notes Barcode
eBook eBook Biblioteca "Angelicum" Pont. Univ. S.Tommaso d'Aquino Nuvola online online - EBSCO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Online access Not for loan (Accesso limitato) Accesso per gli utenti autorizzati / Access for authorized users (ebsco)926226

Includes bibliographical references and index.

This book argues that for John Howard Yoder both theology (in particular Christology) and ethics are expressions of the meaning of the narrative of Jesus. All such statements are relative to a particular context, which means that theology and ethics are always subject to reaching back to the narrative in order to restate the meaning in new and ever-changing contexts. This methodology is visible in Yoder's Preface to Theology, which has been little used in most treatments of Yoder's thought. Yoder has been characterized as standing on Nicene orthodoxy, criticized for rejecting Nicene orthodoxy, called heterodox, and designated a postmodern thinker to be interpreted in terms of other such thinkers. None of these characterizations adequately locates the basis of his methodology in the narrative of Jesus. Thus John Howard Yoder: Radical Theologian aims to go beyond or to supersede existing treatments with its demonstration that Yoder is a radical theologian in the historical meaning of radical--that is, as one who returns to the root. For Christian faith, this root is Jesus Christ. Parts II and III of the book explore the sources of Yoder's approach, and its application in several contemporary contexts.

Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed February 25, 2015).

List of contributors -- Foreword / Marva J. Dawn -- Preface / J. Denny Weaver -- Introduction / J. Denny Weaver -- Christology: from the root / J. Dennny Weaver -- Sixteenth-century Anabaptist roots / Earl Zimmerman -- Harold S. Bender, Anabaptist vision, and the Goshen school / Zachary J. Walton -- Oscar Cullmann and radical descipleship / Earl Zimmerman -- Deconstructing Karl Barth / Gerald J. Mast -- Jesus to Paul / Ted Grimsrud -- The Free church as body politics / Earl Zimmerman -- Pacifism as a way of knowing / Gerald J. Mast -- A Nonviolent public ethic / Glen Harold Stassen -- Interfaith conversations: Judaism to Islam to Hinduism / J. Denny Weaver and Earl Zimmerman -- A Model in conversation with Black and evangelical theology / J. Denny Weaver and Gerald J. Mast -- Reflections from a chagrined "Yoderian" in face of his sexual violence / Ted Grimsrud -- Sin and failure in Anabaptist theology / Gerald J. Mast -- Conclusion / J. Denny Weaver -- Afterword: to the next generation of Pacifist theologians / Lisa Schirch -- Bibliography -- Index.