Acknowledgements Abbreviations Part I: Re-reading Schleiermacher I. Chapter One: Introduction a. Schleiermacher’s Critics 1. Subjectivism 2. Sexism and the Privatization of Christianity 3. Uncritical Adoption of Enlightenment Thinking 4. Non-Trinitarian Theology b. Complexity in Trinitarian Theologies c. Chapter Overview 1. Part One: Re-reading Schleiermacher 2. Part Two: Schleiermacher and the Trinity 3. Part Three: Tensions and Connections d. A Final Word II. Chapter Two: Schleiermacher’s Approach a. An Eternal Covenant between Christian Faith and Academic Inquiry 1. Theology in the Modern University 2. Theology for a Modern Church 3. Christian Union in Protestant Prussia 4. Methodological Barriers to Schleiermacher’s Goals 5. Similarities with Calvin b. Anti-speculative Doctrine 1. Knowledge or Consciousness of God and Self 2. Holistic Christian Faith 3. Divine Activity in Relation to Creation c. Different Conceptual Structures in the Doctrine of God 1. Duplex Cognitio Dei 2. Simplex Cognitio Dei d. Anticipating Implications for Trinitarianism Part II: Schleiermacher and the Trinity III. Chapter Three: Rejecting Immanent Trinitarianism a. Schleiermacher’s ‘Trinitarian Treatise’ 1. Potential Explanations for Misreadings 2. The Placement of the ‘Trinitarian Treatise’ 3. Calls for Protestant Revitalization b. Anti-speculative Objection 1. Dogmatics as Part of Historical Theology 2. Similarities with Immanent Trinitarianism 3. The New Testament as the Distinctive Source for the Development of the Doctrine of the Trinity c. Conceptual Difficulties 1. Inequality of Persons and Essence 2 Inequality of Causality and Persons 3. The Doctrine of the Trinity as a Stumbling Block d. Sabellianism Reconsidered IV. Chapter Four: Constructing Essential Trinitarianism a. Three Distinctions-in-Relation 1. Causality 2. Love 3. Wisdom 4. Essential Trinitarianism b. Personhood and the Divine Life 1. Schleiermacher’s Relation to Spinoza 2. Rejecting ‘Personality’, Affirming ‘the Living God’ 3. Using Personal Analogies c. Toward Divine Personhood 1. Transcendental Reasoning 2. Communicability of Difference 3. Activity in Relation to Matter 4. Christologically-Centered Relationality 5. Discerning Attention and Circumscribed Ineffability V. Chapter Five: Developing Economic Trinitarianism a. Methodological Divergences 1. Between Divine Attributes: Christ and the Church 2. Interrupting a Strictly Backwards Reading b. Jesus of Nazareth c. Spirit in the Church d. Preparation for the Union of the Divine Essence with Human Nature 1. Holiness 2. Justice e. Relating the Doctrines of the Immanent and Economic Trinity 1. Hesitations about a Doctrine of Appropriation 2. Schleiermacher’s Doctrine of the Trinity as Eternal and Temporal Part III. Tensions and Connections VI. Chapter Six: Divine Alterity a. Via Causalitatis b. Apophatic Attributes 1. Eternity 2. Omnipresence 3. Omnipotence 4. Omniscience c. Coherence of Alterity and Trinity VII. Chapter Seven: Consciousness of God a. Distinguishing Christian God-Consciousness from General Religious Consciousness 1. Christian God-Consciousness 2. Cause and Effect, Subject and Object b. Christomorphic Anthropology VIII. Chapter Eight: Conclusion a. Apophasis and Kataphasis b. Christian Ecumenism c. Ecotheology Bibliography Index of Primary Sources Index of Authors
Presents a more accurate and fresh look at Schleiermacher's doctrine of God and its importance for the history of Christian thought and contemporary theology.
Shelli M. Poe is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, Director of the Initiative for Vocational Inquiry, and Director of the interdisciplinary minor in Vocation, Ethics and Society at Millsaps College, USA.
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