2022/03/25

Kathryn Tanner - Wikipedia

Kathryn Tanner - Wikipedia

Kathryn Tanner

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Kathryn Tanner
BornMarch 29, 1957 (age 64)
NationalityAmerican
Other namesKathryn Eileen Tanner
Academic background
Alma materYale University
Influences
Academic work
DisciplineTheology
Sub-disciplineSystematic theology
School or tradition
Institutions
Doctoral students

Kathryn Eileen Tanner (born 1957) is an American theologian who serves as Frederick Marquand Professor of Systematic Theology at Yale Divinity School.[3]

Biography[edit]

Born on March 29, 1957,[4] Tanner earned her BA, MA, MPhil, and PhD degrees from Yale University. Her career began at Yale by teaching for the department of religious studies. She later moved to the University of Chicago where she served as the Dorothy Grant Maclear Professor of Theology. Afterwards, she returned to teach at her alma mater.[3]

Tanner does constructive Christian theology in both the Catholic and Protestant traditions. Her work addresses contemporary challenges to the Christian faith through the creative use of both the history of Christian thought and interdisciplinary methods, such as critical, social, and feminist theory.[5] Her first book, God and Creation in Christian Theology developed an account of the non-competitive relations between God and creatures. Her next book The Politics of God applies non-competitive relations to the political sphere. Her book Theories of Culture: A New Agenda for Theology explores the relevance of cultural studies for rethinking theological method. She has also written a short systematic text on the Incarnation (Jesus, Humanity and the Trinity) and 

a text on the economic relevance of Christian beliefs about God (Economy of Grace). Christ the Key, argues for the centrality of Christ in all theological questions. 

Her latest book Christianity and the New Spirit of Capitalism pulls together some of her previous discussions on economy and theology and discusses the moral, social, and theological concerns with present-day "finance-dominated capitalism" and how Christian theology offers better alternatives.

She is a past president of the American Theological Society and is active in the Episcopal Church. She is a member of the Theology Committee that advises the Episcopal House of Bishops.[3]

She is on the editorial boards of Modern TheologyInternational Journal of Systematic Theology, and Scottish Journal of Theology.[6]

Tanner delivered the Warfield Lectures at Princeton Theological Seminary in 2007[7] and the Gifford Lectures at the University of Edinburgh in 2016, which became her 2019 book Christianity and the New Spirit of Capitalism.[8]

Christ the Key[edit]

Kathryn Tanner has done much work to contribute to the scholastic work of systematic theology. One of the most well-known works was her book called Christ the Key, published in 2010. This work is mainly Christocentric, describing Christ as center for connecting humanity with God.[9] This book discusses the following topics in the seven chapters of the book, Human Nature, Grace (divided into 2 parts), trinitarian life, politics, death and sacrifice, and the working of the spirit.[10] This book is best used to understand aspects of contemporary theology connected to the soul of humanity in relation with the divine humans choose to interact with. Kathryn states in the preface of this book that it is a sequel to her book Jesus, Humanity and the Trinity, continuing to explain the importance of the centrality of God seeking out humanity to be in intimate relationship with us through the life, death and resurrection of the Son, Jesus Christ.[11] This is a good book to follow the 2001 work to continue understanding her Christological view on God's interactions with humanity through Christ.

The Gift of Theology[edit]

The Gift of Theology: The Contribution of Kathryn Tanner was put together by editors Rosemary P. Carbine and Hilda P. Koster, who were both so deeply moved and affected by Kathryn's work they decided to put together this book to best give their thanks to Kathryn Tanner for her contributions to contemporary theology.[12] In this work, we get a much better understanding and appreciation of who Kathryn Tanner is in relation to her work as a scholar by her colleagues who admire her work most in similar fields of study. John E. Thiel, a professor of religious studies at Fairfield University, writes the foreword, describing Kathryn Tanner as "the most accomplished theologian of her generation."[13]

This book goes on to explain in detail Kathryn Tanner's contributions and explaining the theology behind her best known works. It is a critical analysis of all her works, how she processes theology and presents them and how they have affected the theological world.

Publications[edit]

  • Christianity and the New Spirit of Capitalism (Yale, 2019)
  • Christ the Key (Cambridge, 2010)
  • Economy of Grace (Fortress, 2005)
  • Jesus, Humanity and the Trinity (Fortress, 2001)
  • Theories of Culture: A New Agenda for Theology (Fortress, 1997)
  • Politics of God: Christian Theologies and Social Justice (Fortress, 1992)
  • God and Creation in Christian Theology: Tyranny or Empowerment? (Blackwell, 1988)

References[edit]

  1. ^ Michaud, Kujundzija & Cassell.
  2. ^ Carbine & Koster 2015b, p. xxix.
  3. Jump up to:a b c "Kathryn Tanner"Yale Divinity School. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  4. ^ Fuller 2008, p. 413.
  5. ^ Pauw, Amy Plantinga (July 5, 2017). "From God-Talk to God's Work"The Christian Century. Vol. 134, no. 14. pp. 22–25. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  6. ^ "Kathryn Tanner | Yale Center for Faith and Culture"faith.yale.edu. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
  7. ^ Myers, Ben (March 27, 2007). "Kathryn Tanner"www.faith-theology.com. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  8. ^ "Christianity and the New Spirit of Capitalism"The Gifford Lectures. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  9. ^ Tanner 2010, p. i.
  10. ^ Tanner 2010, p. v.
  11. ^ Tanner 2010, p. vii.
  12. ^ Carbine & Koster 2015a, p. xvii.
  13. ^ Thiel 2015, p. xxi.

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]

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William Shakespeare A Very Short Introduction by Stanley Wells | PDF | William Shakespeare | Romeo And Juliet

William Shakespeare A Very Short Introduction by Stanley Wells

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The Complete Biography of Prophet Jesus (Pbuh) Bilingual Edition English & Indonesia

The Complete Biography of Prophet Jesus (Pbuh) Bilingual Edition English & Indonesia

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The complete biography of Prophet Jesus (Pbuh) or Isa from islamic perspective based from The Holy Quran & Al-Hadits.In Islam faith, Prophet Isa ibn Maryam (Jesus, son of Mary‎), or Prophet Jesus, is understood to be the penultimate prophet and messenger of Allah (God) and al-Masih, the Arabic term for Messiah (Christ), sent to guide the Children of Israel (bani israil in Arabic) with a new revelation: al-Injil (Arabic for "the Gospel"). Jesus is believed to be a prophet who neither married nor had any children and is reflected as a significant figure, being found in the Quran in 93 ayaat (Arabic for verses) with various titles attached such as "Son of Mary", "Spirit of God and the "Word of God" among other relational terms, mentioned directly and indirectly, over 187 times. Prophet Jesus is the most mentioned person in the Quran; 25 times by the name Isa, 3rd-person 48 times, 1st-person 35 times, the rest as titles and attributes.

The Quran (central religious text of Islam) and most Hadith (testimonial reports) mention Prophet Jesus to have been born a "pure boy" (without sin) to Mary (Maryam‎) as the result of virginal conception, similar to the event of the Annunciation in Christianity. In Islamic theology, Jesus is believed to have performed many miracles, several being mentioned in the Quran such as speaking as an infant, healing various ailments like blindness, raising the dead to life, making birds out of clay and breathing life into them. Over the centuries, Islamic writers have referenced other miracles like casting out demons, having borrowed from pre-Islamic sources, some heretical, and from canonical sources as legends about Jesus were expanded. Like all prophets in Islamic thought, Prophet Jesus is also called a Muslim (one who submits to the will of God), as he preached that his followers should adopt the "straight path". Prophet Jesus is written about by some Muslim scholars as the perfect man.

In Islam, Prophet Jesus is believed to have been the precursor to Prophet Muhammad SAW, attributing the name Ahmad to someone who would follow Jesus. Islam traditionally teaches the rejection of divinity, that Jesus was not God incarnate, nor the Son of God and, according to some interpretations of the Quran, the death and crucifixion is widely denied and not believed to have occurred. Despite the earliest Muslim traditions and exegesis quoting somewhat conflicting reports regarding death and length of death, the mainstream Muslim belief is that Prophet Jesus (Isa) did not suffer death but was instead raised alive to heaven (sky).

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Confucian Questions to Augustine by JunSoo Park - Ebook | Scribd

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Confucian Questions to Augustine: Is My Cultivation of Self Your Care of the Soul?


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In Confucian Questions to Augustine, Park compares the works of Confucius and Mencius with those of Saint Augustine. His purpose in so doing is to show Confucian Augustinianism as a new theological perspective on Confucian-Christian ethics and Augustinianism by discovering analogies and differences in their respective understandings of the formation of moral self, particularly the acquisition of virtue, and how they believe this leads to happiness. Using the method of inter-textual reasoning, and assuming continuity between Augustine's early and later works, he compares Confucius and Mencius's xue, si, li, and yue with Augustine's moral learning, contemplation, sacrament, and music, respectively. Confucian Augustinianism shows how to enjoy God, follow Jesus, and live in the Holy Spirit.

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JunSoo Park has a PhD from the University of Edinburgh and now serves as minister at St. Andrew’s United Reformed Church, London.

The Making of an African Christian Ethics by Wilson Muoha Maina - Ebook | Scribd

The Making of an African Christian Ethics by Wilson Muoha Maina - Ebook | Scribd


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The Making of an African Christian Ethics: Bénézet Bujo and the Roman Catholic Moral Tradition


By Wilson Muoha Maina
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An exploration of the development of a contextualized Roman Catholic moral theology in an African context is warranted in our day. This book is a study of the work of Benezet Bujo, an African moral theologian. An analysis of Bujo's work shows the various aspects of an African Catholic moral theology. Bujo's work is viewed here as critically bridging African moral theology and the development of moral theology in the Catholic Church, especially in the West. An African moral theology in this work builds on the elements of the renewal of moral theology after the Second Vatican Council. The renewal elements reflected in Bujo's work and other African Catholic theologians include, among others, the use of Scripture, the relevance of history, the debate on moral norms, the relevance of social sciences to moral discourse, the theory of natural moral law, and the relation between the theologian and the magisterium. This work, therefore, locates the theology of Bujo in the development of moral theology after the Second Vatican Council. The author establishes a relation between African traditional religions, African history, Christology, natural moral law, moral autonomy debate, the encyclical Veritatis Splendor, and political-liberation theological ethics.

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Wilson Muoha Maina is an associate professor of philosophy and religious studies at the University of West Florida. He has authored several journal articles on African Christian ethics and theology.