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Scholarship March 29, 2017

A Preface to Theology

The Wabash Center

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Author
Gilpin, W. Clark
Publisher
University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL
ISBN
226294005
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: What Do Theologians Do?

ch. 1 The Fruition of the Seminary Ideal, 1720-1830
ch. 2 Scholarship and the Culture of Protestantism, 1830-1880
ch. 3 The Case for Theology in the University, 1880-1930
ch. 4 Intellectual Center of the Church's Life, 1930-1960
ch. 5 The Background of Possibilities

Notes
Index
At a time of widespread perplexity about the social role of humanistic scholarship, few disciplines are as anxious about their nature and purposes as academic theology. In this important work, W. Clark Gilpin, dean of the University of Chicago Divinity School, proposes that American theological scholarship become responsible to a threefold public: the churches, the academic community, and civil society. Gilpin approaches this goal indirectly, by investigating the historic social roles of Protestant theologians and the educational institutions in which they have pursued their scholarship and teaching. Ranging from analyses of the New England Puritan Cotton Mather to contemporary theologians as "public intellectuals," Gilpin proposes that we find out what theology is by asking what theologians do. By showing how particular cultural problems have always shaped the work of theologians, Gilpin's work profoundly illuminates the foundations of American academic theology, providing insights that will help guide its future. (From the Publisher)