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Scholarship March 29, 2017

To Teach, To Delight, and To Move: Theological Education in a Post-Christian World

The Wabash Center

scholarship-to-teach-to-delight-and-to-move-theological-education-in-a-post-christian-world.jpeg
Author
Cunningham, David S., ed.
Publisher
Cascade Books, Eugene, OR
ISBN
1592449867
Table of Contents
Foreword (L. Gregory Jones)
Introduction: Re-Visioning Theological Education

Part One - Theological Education as Faithful Persuasion
ch. 1 The Classical Rhetorical Tradition and theological education (David S. Cunningham, Don H. Compier, and James L. Boyce)
ch. 2 Beyond the classical paradigm: Contemporary analysis and theological education (Janet L. Weathers)
ch. 3 Rhetoric, Postmodernism, and theological education: What has Vincennes to do with Athens or Jerusalem? (A. K. M. Adam)

Part Two - The Tasks of Theological Education
ch. 4 Theology as communication: Revelation, faith and the church as ongoing dialogues (Bradford E. Hinze)
ch. 5 Theology as confession: Redeeming a theological trope for pedagogy (Stephen H. Webb)
ch. 6 Theology as discernment: Truth, power and authority (Wess Avram)
ch. 7 Theology as testimony: Rhetoric, public theology, and education for ministry (Don H. Compier)

Part Three - Re-Visioning the Theological Encyclopedia
ch. 8 Rhetoric and practical theology - Toward a new paradigm (Richard R. Osmer)
ch. 9 Rhetoric and the word of God - Treasure in earthen vessels (James L. Boyce)
ch. 10 Rhetoric and historical theology - Gregory the Theologian (Frederick W. Norris)
ch. 11 Rhetoric and Christian doctrine - Trinity and teaching (David S. Cunningham)
ch. 12 Rhetoric and Proclamation - A relational paradigm (Susan Karen Hedahl)

Conclusion: Theory in Practice
ch. 13 A Rhetorical approach to theological education - Assessing an attempt at re-visioning a curriculum (Donald Juel, and Patrick Keifert)

Bibliography: Rhetorical Resources for Theological Education
List of Contributors
Index of Names
Index of Subjects
From the Publisher This book initiates a new conversation about how theological education might be re-envisioned for the twenty-first century church. The prevailing curricular structure in today’s seminaries and divinity schools was fashioned in a very different era – one that assumed the continued cultural dominance of Christianity and the continued academic dominance of the canons of Enlightenment reason. Neither assumption is viable in today’s post-Christian world; hence, our new circumstances demand a new vision for theological education.
The authors of this volume offer an important resource for this project through their creative appropriation of the classical rhetoric tradition, particularly as it has been rehabilitated in the contemporary context. Like St. Augustine, they believe that the chief goals of Christian theology are similar to those of classical rhetoric: “to teach, to delight, and to move.” And the authors are united their conviction that these must also be the goals of theological education in a post-Christian era.
This volume arises out of a passionate commitment to the cause of theological education. The authors hail from a wide range of denominational traditions and have taught in numerous seminaries and divinity schools. They have also studied the classical and postmodern rhetorical traditions in both theory and practice. They met as a group on numerous occasions to read one another’s contributions to the volume and to offer guidance for the process of rewriting. As a result, this book is much more than a mere collection of essays; it is a jointly-authored work, and one which presents an integrated vision for the future of theological education.