ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2002. How does one go about "doing Christian theology"? Yong explores this question by proposing a pneumatological-trinitarian hermeneutic. Its thesis is that interpretation and theological method is an ongoing tri-logue of Spirit-Word-Community: of interpretive subjects as imaginative, obligated and relational agents; of the horizons of the interpreter, the biblical and ecclesial traditions, and the world; and of founding, historical, and ongoing communities of faith and inquiry. Ecumenical perspectives on the topics of pneumatology (the doctrine of the Spirit), metaphysics (foundational pneumatology), epistemology (the pneumatological imagination), and trinitarian theology converge in this book to move forward the present discussion of theological method.

part One|94 pages

Foundational Pneumatology: Toward a Trinitarian Theology and Metaphysics

part Two|99 pages

The Pneumatological Imagination: Epistemology in Triadic Perspective

part Three|92 pages

Theological Interpretation: The Trialectic of Spirit-Word-Community

chapter 7|24 pages

The Acts of Interpretation: Spirit

chapter 8|29 pages

The Objects of Interpretation: Word

chapter 9|36 pages

The Contexts of Interpretation: Community

chapter |6 pages

Provisional Conclusions