ABSTRACT

This book introduces a new "multilateral" methodology for the contemporary study of theology. It bases this methodology on the idea that there are too many materials contributing as sources for theologizing to sustain the "one method fits all" approach found in many systematic theologies within Christianity. What is needed instead is something that reflects the various and varied natures, purposes, and tasks of theologians’ theologizing for their respective contexts.

Engaging materials from a range of Christian traditions, including Evangelicalism, the Catholic Magisterium, and a limited range of pan-Orthodox resources, the book analyzes and assesses major factors that have shaped different streams of theology. Addressing doctrinal development, scripture and revelation, historical tradition and creeds, philosophy and truth, sciences and interdisciplinarity, experience, religious pluralism, and culture, it demonstrates how these various streams can form a multilateral whole. The book concludes by examining the centers and peripherals of methodologies in theologization for a spectrum of theological traditions/streams, both across and beyond Christianity.

By offering an approach that keeps in step with the increasingly interconnected and pluralistic world in which we live, this book provides a vital resource for any scholar of Christian theology, constructive theology, contextual theologies, and systematic theology, as well as religious studies.

chapter 1|15 pages

Introducing theological prolegomena

chapter 2|12 pages

Theological prolegomena and doctrinal development

A historical overview

chapter 3|26 pages

Scripture and revelation

chapter 4|13 pages

History, tradition, and creeds

chapter 5|24 pages

Reasoned truth

Philosophy and theological methodology

chapter 6|22 pages

Reasoned truth

Theology, sciences, and interdisciplinarity

chapter 7|15 pages

Experience

Philosophical, religious, theological, and geopolitical considerations

chapter 8|21 pages

Truth and religious pluralism

chapter 9|28 pages

Culture and theological prolegomena

Culture’s multi-variegated contexts for theologization

chapter 10|22 pages

Conclusion

Centers and peripherals of theological-hermeneutics