An Eschatological Imagination
A Revisionist Christian Eschatology in the Light of David Tracy’s Theological Project
©2008
Monographs
XII,
192 Pages
Series:
American University Studies , Volume 274
Summary
In the twentieth century, Christian eschatology, the doctrine about the final reality, became a storm center for Christian systematic theologians because of the rediscovery of the eschatological character of Jesus Christ. In the twenty-first century, Christian theologians continue to wrestle with the claims of Christian eschatology because of a postmodern suspicion of eschatological certainty claims about a future that is, after all, objectively unavailable, yet still of great human concern. Human beings live on hope for the future. An Eschatological Imagination recognizes the problem of the future for Christian eschatology. Building on the major theological writings of David Tracy, it offers a revised way of thinking and living eschatologically in the form of an eschatological imagination as a rhetoric of virtue, an exhortation to live in Christian hope in a postmodern world and into an objectively unavailable and uncertain future. Within such a rhetoric, hope becomes action – not mere sentiment – that seeks to create a Christian eschatological future.
Details
- Pages
- XII, 192
- Publication Year
- 2008
- ISBN (Hardcover)
- 9781433102271
- Language
- English
- Keywords
- Eschatologie Revisionist theology Christian eschatology Hope Virtue Rhetoric Tracy, David
- Published
- New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2008. XII, 192 pp.
- Product Safety
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