On Niebuhr : a theological study / Langdon Gilkey.

By: Gilkey, Langdon Brown, 1919-2004
Material type: TextTextPublisher: Chicago : University of Chicago Press, c2001Description: xiii, 261 p. ; 24 cmISBN: 0226293416 (alk. paper)Subject(s): Niebuhr, Reinhold, 1892-1971 | Theology -- History -- 20th centuryGenre/Form: History.DDC classification: 230/.092 LOC classification: BX4827.N5 | G55 2001
Contents:
First Encounters and Early Political Writings -- Early Encounters -- The Structure of Niebuhr's Theology -- Early Political Writings -- Niebuhr's Mature Theology -- Meaning, Mystery, Myth, and Revelation -- The Doctrine of Human Nature -- Sin: Anxiety, Pride, and Self-Deception -- Sin: In Bondage yet Free, Inevitable but Not Necessary -- The Understanding of History -- The Biblical Understanding of History -- The Enigma of History and Eschatology -- Reflections.
Review: "For those living in the 1930s and 1940s who endured the devastation of the Depression, racial and social unrest, and the two World Wars ending in the Holocaust, the question of how to carry on the struggle for justice in a world seemingly filled with self-interest and evil became all-consuming. Many turned for an answer to the realistic, yet also optimistic, political and ethical writings of Reinhold Niebuhr (1892-1971)."Summary: "As the eminent theologian Langdon Gilkey demonstrates in this book. Niebuhr was able to provide such a persuasive answer because his social understanding was a theological understanding, one accomplished by viewing human being in relation to God as well as in its political and economic relations. This "Biblical" understanding of human nature, while acknowledging the often deep ambiguity and hypocrisy of the real historical world, also revealed a divine hand guiding that history. To Niebuhr, it is God's participation in history that gives it meaning and a promise of fulfillment, and presents believers with the possibility of a social realism that maintains its moral nerve rather than succumbing to cynicism or despair."Summary: "On Niebuhr provides the first systematic treatment of Niebuhr's mature theology in relation to his political theory and the crises of the 1930s and 1940s by a scholar who both understands the theology deeply and knew Niebuhr personally. The book begins with a look at Niebuhr's early political writings, then moves to Niebuhr's later understanding of human nature and history. On Niebuhr also presents a moving account of the role that Niebuhr's thought played in Gilkey's own experience as a prisoner of war and in his subsequent life's work. The result is an indispensable book for the many students and admirers of both these religious thinkers."--Jacket.
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Item type Current library Class number Status Date due Barcode
Books / Monographs Dominican University College Library / Collège Universitaire Dominicain
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BX 4827 .N5 G54 2001 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) Available 30000000723498

Includes bibliographical references and index.

First Encounters and Early Political Writings -- Early Encounters -- The Structure of Niebuhr's Theology -- Early Political Writings -- Niebuhr's Mature Theology -- Meaning, Mystery, Myth, and Revelation -- The Doctrine of Human Nature -- Sin: Anxiety, Pride, and Self-Deception -- Sin: In Bondage yet Free, Inevitable but Not Necessary -- The Understanding of History -- The Biblical Understanding of History -- The Enigma of History and Eschatology -- Reflections.

"For those living in the 1930s and 1940s who endured the devastation of the Depression, racial and social unrest, and the two World Wars ending in the Holocaust, the question of how to carry on the struggle for justice in a world seemingly filled with self-interest and evil became all-consuming. Many turned for an answer to the realistic, yet also optimistic, political and ethical writings of Reinhold Niebuhr (1892-1971)."

"As the eminent theologian Langdon Gilkey demonstrates in this book. Niebuhr was able to provide such a persuasive answer because his social understanding was a theological understanding, one accomplished by viewing human being in relation to God as well as in its political and economic relations. This "Biblical" understanding of human nature, while acknowledging the often deep ambiguity and hypocrisy of the real historical world, also revealed a divine hand guiding that history. To Niebuhr, it is God's participation in history that gives it meaning and a promise of fulfillment, and presents believers with the possibility of a social realism that maintains its moral nerve rather than succumbing to cynicism or despair."

"On Niebuhr provides the first systematic treatment of Niebuhr's mature theology in relation to his political theory and the crises of the 1930s and 1940s by a scholar who both understands the theology deeply and knew Niebuhr personally. The book begins with a look at Niebuhr's early political writings, then moves to Niebuhr's later understanding of human nature and history. On Niebuhr also presents a moving account of the role that Niebuhr's thought played in Gilkey's own experience as a prisoner of war and in his subsequent life's work. The result is an indispensable book for the many students and admirers of both these religious thinkers."--Jacket.

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