English Public Theology

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A01=Joan Lockwood O'Donovan
A01=Joan Lockwood O’Donovan
Anglican tradition
anthropocentric
Author_Joan Lockwood O'Donovan
Author_Joan Lockwood O’Donovan
Biblical paradigm
Book of Common Prayer
Category=QRVG
Christ's execution
Christology
creation
ecclesiology
English Reformation
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
evangelical ministries
moral agency
moral theology of English Reformation
patristic
public theological alternative
public theological tradition
resurrection
sacraments
salvation
Scripture
soteriology
Thomist
Tudor practices of worship

Product details

  • ISBN 9780567712516
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Nov 2023
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This study commends the public theology of the English Reformation as a fruitful though neglected resource for a critical analysis of the contradictions of freedom that riddle late-modern liberal democracies and a constructive response to them. Drawn from the key legal, liturgical, homiletic and confessional elements of the English Reformation, this foundational Anglican tradition provides a theological vantage point for understanding current moral and political impasses in the western legacy of natural rights.

The extensive development of natural rights in pre-modern scholastic theory and practice and its continuity with theoretical development from the 17th century onward make the Reformers’ criticisms of scholastic moral, political, and ecclesial thought germane to identifying the problematic features of the prevailing modern tradition and to furnishing a theological alternative to them. These features are: an individualistic and voluntarist conception of moral agency, a regulative and juridical orientation to human relationships, and an anthropocentric concentration on human rather than on divine right, judgement, and freedom. The humanity they portray is detached from its created ordering to Christological perfection and bound within a self-enclosed ethical and political self-understanding. This is effectively countered by the English reformers’ presentation of the salvation of creation in Christ, faith working through love, the spiritual fellowship of the church, and the provisional character of political jurisdiction.

Joan Lockwood O'Donovan is Honorary Reader in the School of Divinity at the University of St. Andrews, UK.

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